jmathai 2 hours ago

Maybe slightly off topic to the article, but I don't really care what Peter Thiel has to say. I do think we need to collectively think about how to not give these people a microphone. It's one thing to have concentrated wealth. It's a very different thing to have concentrated wealth and people's attention. I think that's a much more interesting discussion :).

  • throw310822 an hour ago

    This is the article's second sentence:

    "Thiel’s lurid, apocalyptic view of world politics may be ludicrous or even deranged, but his wealth and power mean that we can’t afford to ignore it."

    • palmotea 30 minutes ago

      This exactly. There are different kind of attention. We shouldn't pay attention to the billionaires in a submissive follower mode; or in a "let them set the agenda" mode; but in a wary, defensive mode (ready to oppose or try to get out of the way).

    • epgui an hour ago

      Presumably the commenter read the article and is expressing his disagreement with the article’s second sentence.

    • nanfinitum an hour ago

      Yes we can actually.

      I think it has something to do with Silicon Valley's obsession with money. To SV-people, billionaires are like gods. They are worshipped and invited to all the events worth going to (meetups, hackathons, etc.). Everyone wants to be like them.

      And it seems to me to be a geographical problem too. In NYC, billionaires are like supervillains. Nobody particularly likes them (outside of select finance bros), and people openly express disdain for them and their greed.

      • entropicdrifter an hour ago

        It's also a governmental problem. Remember that Vance is functionally owned by Thiel, who also backed Trump's campaign.

        So, the issue is really just that he has far too much power, as an individual

      • lowkey_ 38 minutes ago

        > In NYC, billionaires are like supervillains. Nobody particularly likes them (outside of select finance bros), and people openly express disdain for them and their greed.

        I think you may be confusing 'power' or 'impact' with wealth in this take.

        Paul Graham wrote about this in a blog post [1].

        In NYC, being rich is cool, even if you just inherited it all. Having lived 12 years in NYC, I agree wholeheartedly. It's what everyone aspires to have; the Tribeca loft and the Patek watch.

        In SF, PG wrote that nobody cares that you inherited a bunch of wealth unless they're a real estate agent. I think this is true — flashy wealth isn't impressive in SV/SF. Impact and power and the scope of what you've built and created is what's impressive, for better or worse. (I just moved to SF for this reason).

        [1] https://paulgraham.com/cities.html

      • dpark an hour ago

        > In NYC, billionaires are like supervillains.

        This is absurd to the point of being cartoonish. No one treats billionaires like supervillains. How many billionaires are in supermax prisons right now in New York?

        > Nobody particularly likes them

        This is not relevant, regardless of whether it’s true. A ton of people hate Thiel and Trump. Disliking a billionaire doesn’t take away their power.

        • nancyminusone 42 minutes ago

          In cartoons, supervillains are rarely in prison either, even though that's where they belong.

        • baseballdork 42 minutes ago

          > This is absurd to the point of being cartoonish. No one treats billionaires like supervillains. How many billionaires are in supermax prisons right now in New York?

          "Supervillains" are comic book entities who are rarely in prison

          • dpark 11 minutes ago

            Because they escape or cannot be captured. Not because there’s no will to lock them up.

            But this is really not my point. Billionaires == Supervillains is not a commonly held view outside some echo chambers.

    • fastball an hour ago

      Power might be hard to ignore, but wealth you literally just can.

      • SimianSci an hour ago

        Wealth is allowing people to buy consent for their worldviews these days. this is an incredibly naiive take.

        • IncreasePosts an hour ago

          How does one buy consent for a worldview? Buying and selling require two parties - the party who is selling their viewpoint to the highest bidder isn't blameless.

          • relaxing 34 minutes ago

            Traditionally, through personal networks in media and industry — placing talking heads and op-ed’s and editorial direction to repeat your message.

            More recently, purchasing a social network and then flooding it with your worldview.

          • lenkite an hour ago

            The party who accepts the bid generally wins the election.

      • dpark an hour ago

        It’s naive to believe these are not connected. Wealth buys power.

        • palmotea 25 minutes ago

          > It’s naive to believe these are not connected. Wealth buys power.

          Raw power > wealth (see Putin, Vladimir: he doesn't need wealth or even to "own" anything, his raw power gets him everything wealth can buy and more). But for weaker people who aren't so powerful to control the system itself, wealth can get you a lot of power within that system.

      • flag_fagger an hour ago

        They’re roughly proxies for each other. But I think land is a much more fundamental source of power. Makes sense that a lot of these types have started to invest in defense fortresses and opine about building new cities.

      • lenkite an hour ago

        How does a politician or his opponent ignore millions of dollars donated to political campaigns ?

      • BugsJustFindMe an hour ago

        It's weird to not understand that wealth buys power.

      • subw00f an hour ago

        Wealth is power

      • forgetfreeman an hour ago

        That's a dangerously myopic take in a political landscape where money == speech and speech == influence.

      • b00ty4breakfast an hour ago

        "lemme just jump in this swimming pool while ignoring the water"

  • mushufasa an hour ago

    Fundamentally money can buy a microphone (including literally).

    That said, buying airtime/ads does is not sufficient to create traction with your ideas. I have worked at plenty of foundations that spend a lot of money to "raise awareness" on various issues, which ultimately goes nowhere.

    IMHO the zany, outlandish claims by Thiel, are gaining attention because of their inherent shock-value. I sent a text to my girlfriend last week, incredulous that Thiel was reported to claim the Pope is now an antichrist (¡). Definitely not because I agreed with that claim.

    I think the root issue here is deep to human nature -- heightened awareness of danger, that adrenaline amygdala response. Social media helps these messages spread, but news publishers have been putting train wrecks on the front page since the 1800s. A growing handful of savvy operators, Thiel included, have learned how to manipulate this primal instinct to garner fame and influence.

    I'm not sure how to change human nature. I do think that education about these tactics helps -- the magic trick is not as impressive when you know how it is done.

    I find the premise of projects like Ground News -- trying to de-bias media -- really compelling.

    That said, a de-biasing site isn't much help if people don't read it. Infamously, people's politically-melded worldviews are increasingly divorced for reality -- there's a famous example of people in surveys saying they "hated Obamacare" but "loved and relied on the Affordable Care Act" (for international readers: those are the exact same thing, which a simple google search would reveal).

  • shevy-java an hour ago

    I agree on the first part - I could not care any less about those insane superrich. But they use their money to influence people - this part is dangerous and must be stopped.

    • philipallstar an hour ago

      You mostly hear about their views from contrarian articles warning of the dangers of their views.

      • dpark an hour ago

        What does this even mean? Are you trying to imply that the only problem with Thiel’s apocalyptic beliefs is that people are writing articles about them?

      • seattle_spring an hour ago

        Highlighting the lunacy coming from Thiel, Andreesen, Yarvin, Vance, Musk, etc is not being "contrarian."

      • advisedwang an hour ago

        a) that is partly bubble. There are others, in other political and social circles, that do hear from him directly.

        b) regardless of who hears about Thiel's philosophy, it still has impact. He funds political candidates, companies, think tanks etc and directly affect the world.

  • fabian2k an hour ago

    His power is not in his public speech, but in his money, connections and private speech. I think overall it's probably more useful to expose just how insane his views are, even if that publicizes them more broadly.

  • rsynnott an hour ago

    The trouble is, he isn't just a crazy uncle. He's a crazy uncle with significant political power.

  • danans an hour ago

    > It's one thing to have concentrated wealth. It's a very different thing to have concentrated wealth and people's attention.

    Because of human nature, the two are inseparable, and influence over people's attention is power, especially when those people hold seats of power.

    The question is about what perspective society takes towards wealth/power concentration at any given time, and that usually ends up correlated with how the non-wealthy and non-powerful are feeling.

  • duxup 38 minutes ago

    I agree about handing the wrong people a microphone, but people are handing it to him and he has money so it potentally matters, even if I think it should not.

  • jancsika an hour ago

    The name of the draft document escapes me but there's burgeoning work on this. (IETF?)

    IIRC it covers things like how to maintain proper oxygen levels and sustenance while still blocking frequencies in the human audible range with the sand around one's head.

  • sfpotter an hour ago

    The issue is that having concentrated wealth and having concentrated people's attention are not separate things.

  • lm28469 an hour ago

    On the contrary, people should talk about these parasites more so we can get rid of them, they thrive in the shadows

  • giancarlostoro an hour ago

    > I do think we need to collectively think about how to not give these people a microphone.

    I've said this about celebrities for two decades now. Most people don't care though; they love the gossip, I guess.

  • JKCalhoun an hour ago

    Buying elections, politicians, doesn't require a microphone.

  • cbb330 an hour ago

    Sorry, but that take is complete garbage.

    Wanting to “collectively figure out how to take away the microphone” from rich people you dislike isn’t a brave stance against inequality, it’s straight-up authoritarian censorship based on net worth. In a free society, people choose who gets attention. If you don’t like Thiel, out-argue him or ignore him, but don’t fantasize about silencing citizens because they’re successful. And honestly, Thiel’s worldview has real strengths: he’s been early and right on remote work, the stagnation of atom-based industries, the broken incentives in higher education, the dangers of bureaucratic overreach, and the need for bold technological breakthroughs instead of endless regulation. PayPal, Palantir, SpaceX (as an early investor), and backing young founders through the Thiel Fellowship have created massive value and progress. Dismissing all that because he’s rich and contrarian is lazy.

    • galleywest200 an hour ago

      > If you don’t like Thiel, out-argue him or ignore him

      Kind of hard to do this when he has so much money to buy influence anywhere. An example is how the current vice president of the United States is a protege of the guy.

      • cbb330 an hour ago

        Yeah sure, Thiel’s money helped put his protégé Vance in the VP chair, he has real influence, no denying it.

        But scroll this comment section for any critique of Thiel and you’ll see the pattern: his wealth gets attacked, his actual ideas almost never do.

        Take the “Antichrist Thesis” everyone mocks. It’s Rene Girard-speak for centralized, charismatic authoritarianism that weaponizes morality and scapegoating to grab power. Think Sam Altman preaching about AGI danger while lobbying the gov for openai prioritizing and startup stifling policies. Fed government using big tech censorship for preventing hate speech. He’s been dead-on about that danger for decades.

        • BugsJustFindMe an hour ago

          > his wealth gets attacked, his actual ideas almost never do

          This is false. His ideas get attacked plenty because it's clear that his ideas are destructive to society. But there are only so many times one can have the "holy shit his ideas are destructive to society" conversation without talking about how the only reason his destructive ideas are front and center is because of his money.

        • SimianSci an hour ago

          I see multiple comments regarding his actual views. Its been pointed out multiple times that hes a believer in a dark-enlightenment, where democracy has run its course and the power should be taken from ordinary people and centralized to the aristocratic elite such as himself.

          He uses alot of coded language, hence why he is often called a Crypto Fascist (Crypto as in encrypted language, not cryptocurrency) To anyone knowledgeable enough to own a basic mental cypher, they can decode fascist and monarchist language. He's very clearly a selfish person in the business of consolidating his own power over others to fulfill his outlandish fantasies.

          He's deffinately not the only person in the world holding these sorts of views, there is an overabundance of sociopathic elites in the world. But Thiel is able to operate on an influence level beyond that of most sociopaths and thus his wealth is one of the most pressing issues regarding his person. This particular nutjob being far less powerful and wealthy, would preserve alot of our social order.

    • bryanlarsen an hour ago

      > “collectively figure out how to take away the microphone”

      Taking away the microphone is not censorship. We're not talking about taking away Thiel's right to speech, we're talking about taking away undue amplification of Thiel's speech.

      You are allowed to stand on a soapbox and shout your politics.

      But if you amplify your speech on that soapbox you're given a little bit of slack because of "free speech" but then are rightly arrested for public nuisance and/or noise violations.

      • cbb330 an hour ago

        The soapbox-vs-megaphone analogy falls apart fast.

        Name me one serious, intellectually honest critic of Thiel—say, Malcolm Harris, Evgeny Morozov, Shoshana Zuboff, Mariana Mazzucato, or even random Substackers with 100k+ followers who’s struggling to be heard because Thiel bought all the megaphones.

        They all have huge platforms, book deals, TED-level reach, or blue-check amplification. The “undue amplification” crowd never points to a single silenced dissident; they just dislike that Thiel’s ideas are winning in the marketplace anyway.

        If every prominent counter-voice already has a bigger megaphone than 99.9 % of humanity ever will, the complaint isn’t about access it’s that voters and readers keep choosing the “wrong” rich guy.

        • bryanlarsen 39 minutes ago

          Thiel owns Vance. That's the undue level of influenece that should be illegal via anti-corruption laws.

          • AlexandrB 13 minutes ago

            "Thiel owns Vance" is obviously shorthand, but is there evidence that Vance is actually under Thiel's control or do they just agree on stuff? I think proving corruption would probably require that Thiel personally/materially benefit from actions that Vance takes in office, not just that he funded Vance's campaign because he agrees with Vance's politics.

            Edit: I think there's a much stronger case for some kind of corruption charge against Trump, since he's been using the office to enrich himself.[1]

            [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/$Trump

            • Hikikomori a minute ago

              If anything they seem to be friends, with Curtis Yarvin as well, and believes that democracy has run its course. It doesn't really matter if he's just bought by money or if he has bought into the same ideas. Thiel maneuvered Vance into this position using his money and power, and their plans extend far beyond Trump's lifetime.

        • Hikikomori 34 minutes ago

          Does it matter then he can just buy direct political influence and power? He's not winning on the merits of ideas on a marketplace other than getting other billionaires and SV tech people on board as they would be on top of his new hierarchy, much more so than they are today.

    • saati an hour ago

      Just buy your own vice president if you don't like it!

    • Hikikomori an hour ago

      Thiel believes democracy has run its course and wants to usher in a new world of network states where tech CEOs are feudal lords. This is all to avoid the anti Christ and the rapture.

    • Centigonal an hour ago

      Today, the super-wealthy have a megaphone for their worldview that is orders of magnitude more effective than anything anyone else has got. It's not just Thiel: Bezos, Soros, Musk, Paul Singer, and others all are or have been promulgating their worldviews at a scale formerly reserved for nation-states. If unchecked, this inequity will bring us to a world not dissimilar to Byzantine Europe, where the "word of god," as filtered through your lord of choice, utterly dominates the marketplace of ideas.

      • AlexandrB an hour ago

        You're not wrong, but the same megaphone applies to the average Joe. In the early 1990s, unless you were a celebrity or politician, your ideas could not spread beyond the confines of the next city council meeting - at best. Now an average person has far more reach. Yes there's often a cacophony of other information that will drown you out, but it's hardly worse than the previous situation where all media was in the hands of very few, often very wealthy, individuals.

    • SimianSci an hour ago

      free speech absolutism sounds fair in a vacuum but neglects the power disparity that wealth provides in a connected world. Free Speech is not the concept of anyone can say anything without rules. Its about the ability for those without power to be able to speak on an even playing field as those with power.

      The Wealthy and powerful have never had to worry about the freedom of their speech in history. They determined what speech was acceptable.

      Take a break from defending those actively destroying our society through their actions, intentional or not, and learn the foundations of why free speech is designed the way it is.

      • AlexandrB an hour ago

        What's the alternative though? Regulation of speech is often used by those already in power to silence dissent[1]. And there's still plenty a rich person can do to hide themselves as the source of something unsavoury while making it appear "grassroots". Now more than ever, with LLMs and bots.

        It's not that free speech absolutism is fair, it's that there's not really an alternative that's any more fair.

        [1] https://nypost.com/2025/02/21/world-news/germans-cant-insult...

    • hobs an hour ago

      Nothing the GP said had anything to do with taking away people's voice because they are rich, they are saying just because they are rich they don't automatically deserve a microphone.

      HN seems very ready to defend the rich and powerful from attacks that don't even exist and its weird to come here and say how great he is while also seeing what his efforts have actually wrought - nothing positive on education or government overreach via the Trump admin. Paypal may have been ok at one point, but is generally considered to be a terrible company to work with, Palantir is a murderer for hire, and SpaceX burns billions to get us not very much with its continued explosions in the sky with hilarious mars shot promises regardless of its other commercial successes.

      • cbb330 an hour ago

        > how to not give these people a microphone

  • ryandvm an hour ago

    On the other hand, nothing is quite as liberating as finding out that being batshit insane doesn't automatically disqualify you from tremendous economic success.

    • yoyohello13 an hour ago

      I find it kind of terrifying, since the US culture tightly couples economic success with moral superiority.

    • antisthenes 43 minutes ago

      > finding out that being batshit insane doesn't automatically disqualify you from tremendous economic success

      Nothing really disqualifies you from tremendous economic success because inheritance exists.

  • Mistletoe an hour ago

    Unfortunately he and people like him own the microphone, the PA system, the stadium…

    Voting is the only power we have but the voting booths are at the stadium.

  • bananapub an hour ago

    you should care, he and his fellow nutters have siezed control of the USA and most tech-mega-corp leadership either agree with them or will go along with them.

  • MangoToupe an hour ago

    Having peoples’ attention strikes me as not very interesting when you can just buy a newspaper (or the opinions therein) and have it anyway.

    Thiel is courting Christian nutjobs whether or not you pay attention to it. I’m personally not gonna stick my head in the sand.

  • next_xibalba an hour ago

    Having listened to a fair amount of Thiel, he tends to be very, very mischaracterized. He relies on metaphor and allegory to describe the world, and is very philosophical and analytical–all of which opens the door to broad interpretation. For instance, his use of the phrase "Antichrist" has been wildly (and deliberately, IMO) misinterpreted by the commentariat and intelligentsia that dominate our sense making institutions. I'm not suggesting anyone should agree with everything (or anything!) he says, but I think the dismissal of him is to one's own detriment as much of it is very interesting and thoughtful.

    • JohnFen an hour ago

      My problem with Thiel is that he's actively working to make the world a horrible place for anybody who isn't in his circle, and has the wealth needed to make inroads towards that end. I am not interested in listening to someone whose philosophy leads him to such behavior.

      • next_xibalba 10 minutes ago

        > he's actively working to make the world a horrible place for anybody who isn't in his circle

        Can you be more specific? I see similar claims thrown about him, but they don’t really hold up to scrutiny and often o. The basis of straw men claims.

  • myth_drannon an hour ago

    Where to draw the line? Only the right-wing billionaires? What about other more left-wing like Soros.

    And what about the influencers with millions of followers (recent Qatari influence campaign comes to mind)? What about Hollywood (again Qataris and their influence campaign, if you notice how some famous actors started to speak on certain topics)

    • moogly 17 minutes ago

      Do you think you're being subtle? Anyway, Israel's genocide is pretty irrelevant to this subthread.

      • myth_drannon 2 minutes ago

        Darn, can't hide anything from you guys, eh?

shevy-java an hour ago

His ramblings aren't that relevant. The problem is that the money is used to get influence; we could see this with Musk too.

Something has to change. The superrich act as parasites and broken all inter-generational promises. The USA really messed up here - they should have put down control systems to prevent this parasitic situation.

  • browningstreet an hour ago

    Your first sentence is belied by everything else you wrote.

    Saying weird/extreme shit and then building a movement is a way of qualifying initiates and those willing to rally to the cause. It's part of the cult programming playbook. You build an in-crowd and you aim their energies at the out-crowd. It often leads to more unhinged positions too.. these things don't self-correct.

    Thiel's a loon, Elon's a loon, Trump's a loon, Vought's a loon.

    Pointed dismissiveness completely misses the point.

  • ajuc an hour ago

    Media without regulation = oligarchy.

yoyohello13 an hour ago

I would have never believed it 10 years ago. I actually think there is a high probability the world will be ended, not by war or natural disaster, but by an honest to god trillionaire super villain.

The ultra wealthy are an actual existential threat to humanity. No one can be trusted with that much money and power.

  • palmotea 19 minutes ago

    > I would have never believed it 10 years ago. I actually think there is a high probability the world will be ended, not by war or natural disaster, but by an honest to god trillionaire super villain.

    IMHO, that's the obvious end-state of AGI: the economy eats the world and a few trillionaires sitting atop AGI armies control the economy, and nearly everyone else becomes powerless, irrelevent, and eventually "ended."

  • okokwhatever an hour ago

    I fact I think exactly the opposite observing how the nations are ruling their people.

    • SimianSci 39 minutes ago

      Vague whataboutisms aside, at least governments can be changed more easily than waiting for a single individual to die off or be hanged/guillotined.

      • relaxing 32 minutes ago

        Perhaps not though!

    • piva00 an hour ago

      You gotta expand on that because it sounds ludicrous.

LogicFailsMe 2 hours ago

And here I thought he was just trying to wrap his techno libertoonian worldview in the Book of Revelations in the hopes that the religious right would get behind it. Did I miss something?

  • snapdeficit 2 hours ago

    Odd for a gay man to court those who support Leviticus stoning of gays. Self hating? Or just savvy?

    • yannyu 2 hours ago

      In the current setup, having enough money protects you from the laws of the country and the judgment of others. Thiel is rich enough and therefore powerful enough that these culture wars will never personally affect him or anyone he cares about.

      • ashleyn an hour ago

        I've always suspected this mentality had a lot to do with why Peter Thiel is like that. Growing up in the wreckage of the AIDS crisis and thinking to yourself, "I don't have to go down with them. I don't ever have to be like them. I'm still here, because I'm smarter, I'm better than them." I'd never admit any of this publicly, but I have a lot of similar thoughts as a trans woman who slipped through all the cracks and ended up wealthy in my thirties. Poverty is the tip of the discrimination spear and you really could buy your way out of it all.

      • sjsdaiuasgdia an hour ago

        "Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition...There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect."

        • AlexandrB 33 minutes ago

          I used to think this was deep, but it equally applies to progressivism as well as well as a range of human institutions. It's a restatement the basic observation that humans are prone to in-group bias. What's really dangerous is that some refuse to see the same flaw within themselves and instead always ascribe it to "the other".

        • philipallstar an hour ago

          There's no point misrepresenting a political stance. Well, there is a point, but it's malicious.

          • seattle_spring an hour ago

            > There's no point misrepresenting a political stance. Well, there is a point, but it's malicious.

            Interesting perspective, considering that you said this only 5 minutes later in this same post:

            > There's a communist who's just been elected to Mayer of New York.

            • LogicFailsMe an hour ago

              The weird part isn't that a socialist got elected mayor of New York. The weird part is that the Democratic party didn't have anyone better to primary him out of the nomination.

              The two-party system seems pretty cooked at this point.

          • mindslight an hour ago

            Personally I find that quote tired and trite. But so-called "conservatives" could certainly stand to clear up the matter by articulating what their constructive political stances actually are these days - that is beyond merely vice signalling, performative cruelty, and a cult of personality around Dear Leader.

            As a libertarian, I certainly have my problems with the progressive orthodoxy. But every time I've tried to work out current conservative principles, by appealing to what they used to be, I've basically just gotten a brush off of why those traditional ideals are not applicable and then a bunch of whataboutism to justify why they have to kill our society to purportedly save it.

            • LogicFailsMe an hour ago

              TBF Trump isn't a conservative. He's a populist that overthrew the Republican party without firing a single shot and the "conservatives" are all too busy running around in circles to do something about him.

              • mindslight 36 minutes ago

                Sure, I agree and I've made similar arguments. But there are still throngs of people self-identifying as conservative and considering Trump conservative. The best I've been able to surmise is that to them, "conservative" merely means in line with the reactionary talk radio of the past several decades, and that anger has replaced all of their ideals.

                This is kind of understandable, because that reactionary talk radio was always a form of managed dissent. They kept getting tricked by it, and as communications democratized they somewhat realized this (hence the whole RINO thing). But as usual they're unable to see the larger overall picture, and so direct blame at whomever scapegoats their new info-bubble managers point at.

      • CalChris an hour ago

        And that includes the Catholic Church.

    • windexh8er an hour ago

      I think it's more and more evident that the ultra rich (and their circles of subordinates) don't actually care about the common divisive topical areas. It seems to be the playbook that they have a divisive stance to put them in a specific camp (at their convenience). History has shown us that those ultra rich have no regard to flip flopping as it sees fit to their outcomes. It has nothing to do with self hate or being savvy - the reality is: it doesn't matter for them because nobody in their circle cares. I think that's very evident with Thiel.

      If you don't think so, play this game: how would things change for Peter Thiel if he was of a different race? It wouldn't. Greed is blind to these superficial facets that drive the normies up the wall. It's truly by design. And it's so broadly accepted you don't even need to hide these things anymore which only adds insult to injury.

    • shevy-java an hour ago

      The superrich in general don't care about being hypocritical, so I wouldn't pay too much attention to his personal preferences. Just look at the Epstein situation. The superrich frequented there.

    • graemep an hour ago

      That maybe why he seems to be targetting Catholics rather than evangelicals.

      The problem is that in much of the world (e.g. the UK) Catholics are historically left wing, AND uninterested in apocalyptic ideas so it seems a big ask.

      The article does not leave me with any understanding of what his ideas actually are.

    • flag_fagger an hour ago

      I mean, at the end of the day, they’re all fucking kids.

  • solumunus 2 hours ago

    No the dude is genuinely cooked.

    • danudey 2 hours ago

      As are we all, with these people in charge.

      • LogicFailsMe an hour ago

        The federal government can remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent?

    • LogicFailsMe an hour ago

      That would be consistent with his assertion that Greta Thunberg might be the Antichrist.

      Because really?

      Greta Thunberg is the best that a nearly omnipotent second only to the Creator itself can do? Did he ever watch The Omen movies? Insist on nothing less than Sam Neill's portrayal of Damian Thorn as the Antichrist.

      In contrast, Greta Thunberg would be the six-fingered AI slop of antichrists. Is he insinuating that Satan has been replaced with generative AI? If so, times are much worse than I thought.

  • rsynnott an hour ago

    Not everything is a conspiracy; sometimes a crazy person is just a crazy person.

havblue an hour ago

While it's possible this is true, I would have preferred that the article make its own case on why Thiel is crazy and not just cite the Guardian. The article is written for someone who already agrees with the title.

  • relaxing 23 minutes ago

    Jacobin magazine is a leftist partisan publication, so yeah.

linuxhansl an hour ago

Hmm... If anybody meets the definition of his antichrist, it might be him.

The notion that there is an antichrist and that "international agencies, environmentalism and guardrails on technology could quicken its rise" is ludicrous.

The only reason we listen to his nonsense is because he has money, and with that comes power in this country.

I suggest he take some shrooms and chill...

tech_ken an hour ago

> This is what Thiel’s apocalyptic geopolitics looks like in practice: a twisted military-industrial eschatology where an AI-powered genocide is understood to be “restraining” rather than enacting the end of the world.

I could have used some more explication on the connection between Thiel's ideology and Palantir's project portfolio. I felt like this article was structured like "Part 1: Thiel is Crazy, Part 2: Palantir is Awful, Conclusion: They are Related", without really making clear what the relationship between them was. It seems pretty contradictory that someone concerned about "The New One World Order" would create a global police technology apparatus, so deep-diving into the cognitive dissonance there (and how it is soothed by the ideology) would have been interesting (to me).

  • relaxing 24 minutes ago

    I think the author assumes a basic familiarity with the subject. FYI Thiel is chairman and co-founder of Palantir.

    • tech_ken 19 minutes ago

      Okay :) I actually do have a pretty deep familiarity with all of this and that's why I'm criticizing the article. It felt like a rehash of known facts (Thiel is a christian fascist, his company Palantir does innovatively horrible stuff), rather than drawing new connections between those known facts. At a fine-grain I want to know how his ideology underpins the business decisions of his company, I don't need someone to gesture at the two together and mumble something about eschatology.

      • drcongo 3 minutes ago

        I think we (and probably HN in general) aren't the target audience here. Last time I met up with some non-tech friends, Peter Thiel came up a lot in the pub chat - a year ago I'm not sure they would have known who he is. The more people outside of tech who understand what a deranged loon he really is, the better.

sd9 an hour ago

Thiel's ramblings seem so unhinged, delusions of grandeur.

I am so thankful that I'm not rich enough to be surrounded by people who agree with every single half baked thought that I put out.

  • flag_fagger an hour ago

    > I am so thankful that I'm not rich enough to be surrounded by people who agree with every single half baked thought that I put out

    Why not, it’s not as if you’d face any real consequences for your own reckless stupidity.

    • JohnFen an hour ago

      Because I like to be able to live with myself.

  • rsynnott an hour ago

    > I am so thankful that I'm not rich enough to be surrounded by people who agree with every single half baked thought that I put out.

    Fortunately, Silicon Valley has now provided a machine to do that for you.

    I'd be somewhat concerned that this type of severe detachment from reality may become more common as LLMs make the obsequious ego-buffing that was previously available only to billionaires too cheap to meter.

  • drcongo an hour ago

    There's a timecube level of unhinged to his antichrist ramblings - spurious connections steadfastly believed. If he wasn't a billionaire there would be men in white coats chasing him.

  • exogeny an hour ago

    At a certain threshold of wealth, you stop having anyone around you that will tell you anything other than platitudes about how great and wonderful you are. If he ever had any self-awareness or humility -- and that is questionable -- it's been Dunning Krugered and yes-manned into absolute shreds.

    He's a weak, frail manchild masquerading as a cartoonish supervillain. Fuck him.

robertkoss an hour ago

The problem that this article has is essentially this:

> Thiel by contrast is profiting from the use of AI weapons targeting systems used in the Ukraine war and the genocide in Gaza.

Thiel is IMO not doing this for profit. He is deeply ideological, which should be more worrisome.

  • shevy-java an hour ago

    He 100% uses this for profit. Why does he not give away his money?

    It is profit. The craziness is just the cover for it.

    • philipallstar an hour ago

      > He 100% uses this for profit. Why does he not give away his money?

      You haven't given away your money. Does that mean everything you do (including writing the above comment) is for profit?

      • BugsJustFindMe an hour ago

        Everything else aside, this is a really stupid comparison. A multi-billionaire giving away even 99% of their billions of dollars is not the same as any normal person giving away a substantially smaller percentage of their money. Thiel can give away 99% of his money and would still have hundreds of millions of dollars left, which is already quite literally more money than any normal person can spend in their entire lifetime. Even at only 3% interest, he would get more interest money alone per year than the income of almost anyone on the planet.

  • michaelmrose an hour ago

    What AI weapons systems are in use in Ukraine?

zingababba 35 minutes ago

It's crazy how this is trickling down. I work with someone who has recently started openly talking about the antichrist and is convinced the final revelation is going to occur. This person has always been loony but it seems to be going into hyperdrive.

akomtu an hour ago

> Thiel transforms US imperial power and unrestrained technological expansion ... into the final rampart against what he imagines as a catastrophic global homogenization.

Thiel warns about Antichrist, while doing the very thing that's enabling his coming. Unrestrained technological expansion is exactly what's erasing the human spirit and replacing it with a machine culture.

  • bryanlarsen an hour ago

    Supposedly Thiel's earlier writings warn about an Antichrist that sounds very similar to the Thiel and Musk of 2025. OTOH Thiel's current writing claims the antichrist is Greta Thunberg.

adolph an hour ago

If you can parse the academic jargon and get past the ad hominem, the article is a basic meditation on how the state of information technology continues to support both centralization and distribution of decisions.

  This ambivalence mirrors the paradox of American empire, where the United 
  States sees itself simultaneously as a guarantor of global order and a 
  bulwark against world government: the “world’s policeman” unbound by 
  international law.
  • relaxing 19 minutes ago

    You’re allowed to use ad hominem when you’re writing a profile feature. Addressing the man is kind of the point :)

Hikikomori 43 minutes ago

Seems like any time posts about Thiel and a few other billionaires gain traction it flies off the front page quickly.

codr7 an hour ago

Thiel is a creepy fuck, as are most tech bros.

I mean, he looks perfectly human; but once he opens his mouth.

DudeOpotomus an hour ago

Hubris.

It will end him, and his insanely stupid ideology. He is obviously a sociopath with very deep childhood trauma. Karma will get him. Probably cancer as he seems to be genially rotten soul.

  • BugsJustFindMe an hour ago

    I don't think cancer works that way. Also there's no such thing as karma, at least not within a person's lifetime. That much should be extremely obvious by the consequence-free success of a great many sociopaths.

poszlem 2 hours ago

I mean, they have a point. But considering they run a whole journal on literal communism, it’s hard to take them seriously. The message falls flat when it comes from a different flavor of dangerous fantasy.

  • danudey 2 hours ago

    Nice "both sides" argument, very subtle.

    • qwerpy 2 hours ago

      When one side of crazies goes after a different side of crazies, “both sides are crazy” is an appropriate way to look at it.

      • micromacrofoot an hour ago

        I guess if you want to completely abandon nuance... but at that point everyone is some variety of crazy. Half the US believes in ghosts.

      • numbers_guy an hour ago

        There is obviously a huge difference between fascist-aspiring westerners and communist-aspiring westerners. It's disingenuous to pretend otherwise. Tankies are crazy and I don't approve of their ideology, but they also do not dehumanize large swaths of the population.

        • lowkey_ an hour ago

          > they also do not dehumanize large swaths of the population

          They dehumanize and kill everyone equally.

          I think the West (US especially) has a great system of government figured out, and I wouldn't try to say any group attempting to break that is better than another. It's not disingenuous to say that both are authoritarians who kill millions.

          • numbers_guy 35 minutes ago

            Please don't be childish. I have no love for communism and I get that you probably have some personal grudge against communism because of what your family has gone through. But the way you are expressing your hatred of communism is diminishing the evil committed by the NAZIs and the suffering of their victims, and that's just not right. And it's also not winning you any friends and you'd be better served if you showed solidarity with victims of other evil regimes, instead of trying to up them with your personal victim-hood.

            • lowkey_ 9 minutes ago

              Did you mean to comment on my comment?

              The other commenter was "one-upping" by saying that there was a difference, or worse one, out of these extremist ideologies. I disagreed and said that they are both equally horrid.

              Expressing equal hatred for people and systems that kill countless millions through starvation, gulags/concentration camps, and disappearing them, is not childish. I have a ton of solidarity with victims of other evil regimes.

    • antonymoose 2 hours ago

      Sometimes both sides do suck.

      • lm28469 an hour ago

        One side is metastasising in the US government right now, the other has been long dead.

        "it's the same because they're both bad"

        ok...

        • philipallstar an hour ago

          It's not been long dead. There's a communist who's just been elected to Mayer of New York.

          • dpark an hour ago

            He’s a socialist. Painting all socialism as “evil communism” is reductive and dishonest.

            • lowkey_ 43 minutes ago

              Mamdani has said that (1) they'll open government-run stores, and (2) the government will seize buildings from bad landlords.

              My family is from a communist country and I can assure you, that is communistic.

              • dpark 14 minutes ago

                I would agree that government run stores falls into the communist playbook. Despite the communism boogie man, though, I don’t think supporting a couple of communist policies strictly makes a person a communist.

                Trump sent a bunch of government checks to people during Covid and no one called him communist for this.

    • poszlem 2 hours ago

      It’s intentionally blunt. That’s exactly the issue right now: fascists and communists are going at each other and tearing apart what remains of our liberal world.

      • almosthere an hour ago

        I think "facists" is a tiring word to describe them. I would recommend christian nationalists.

        • numbers_guy an hour ago

          "Christian nationalist" is a term that on the one hand, insults Christians, and on the other hand flatters these power hungry grifters. Why would you use such a term?

        • poszlem an hour ago

          I mean - obviously the modern day communists rarely use the original name too. But I guess we are adults and know that in reality, under all of that political marketing, we are talking about fascists and communists.

      • tavavex 36 minutes ago

        Where are all those communists? As far as I can see, only one extreme of the political spectrum is viable in the first world, and that extreme is currently rapidly approaching its logical conclusion of completely crippling democracy. It's not a both sides issue.

      • numbers_guy an hour ago

        > and communists

        Communists left the chat in 1989, grandpa. There are multiple factions competing for power but communists aren't really in the ring right now. It's mostly different flavours of establishment factions and alt-right factions.

      • fukukitaru an hour ago

        It's not particularly worth saving

        • poszlem an hour ago

          I guess we have to learn every 80-100 years, that, actually it is.

  • tanjtanjtanj an hour ago

    Jacobin is not a whole journal on literal communism.

    It’s a magazine with a professed socialist view point but it’s more aligned with left-of-center American politics. Think Sanders or Mamdani rather than Stalin or Mao.

    • psunavy03 an hour ago

      For the US, that's still "far left" as opposed to merely "left of center."

    • loeg an hour ago

      Jacobin is more closely aligned with Stalin or Mao than Sanders or Mamdani, actually.

    • gishh an hour ago

      > Jacobin is not a whole journal on literal communism. It’s a magazine with a professed socialist view point but it’s more aligned with left-of-center American politics. Think Sanders or Mamdani rather than Stalin or Mao.

      > Sanders or Mamdani

      Sanders and Mamdani are about as far left of center as one can get at the moment, such that they almost meld into Stalin or Mao.

      The mental gymnastics you’re doing to blunt that fact is absolutely incredible.

      • dragonwriter an hour ago

        > Sanders and Mamdani are about as far left of center as one can get at the moment

        No, they aren’t. They are about as far left of center as you can get and be competitive in US elections, maybe, but that’s a very different thing. There’s a lot to their left (as you an see from the by the opposition from leftist as sellouts to capitalist/imperialist/etc. institutions both have.)

      • tavavex 34 minutes ago

        > Sanders and Mamdani are about as far left of center as one can get at the moment, such that they almost meld into Stalin or Mao.

        So, when's Mamdani's Great Purge coming? Do you think he's gonna stand by the standards of his historical ideological equivalent, Stalin, and execute a couple hundreds of thousands of elites (if we're going by the same proportions as the USSR), or is he going all out - maybe he could get a million deaths in? Maybe he could also start a famine or two on the way there?

        The utter insanity of American politics baffles me. "Anything left is abhorrent totalitarian communism in the making" isn't just a meme, it's a foundational piece of mainstream American ideology that has been at its core for nearly a century now.

      • rsynnott an hour ago

        > such that they almost meld into Stalin or Mao.

        ... Oh, come on now. I can't tell whether you're extremely confused about Sanders and Mamdani, or extremely confused about Stalin and Mao.

        https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/mar/25/bernie-sande... would have gone very differently if Sanders was Mao, for a start.

        • gishh an hour ago

          You really think if they had the unchecked power of Stalin or mao they would be… better?

          Absolute power corrupts absolutely. It’s a no-kidding literary tool used throughout history.

      • mightyham an hour ago

        > such that they almost meld into Stalin or Mao

        Stalin was an ideological authoritarian that executed political rivals and used lethal force, price controls, and other governmental tools to control the economy and the general working population. The idea that Sanders and Mambani advocate anything close to that is laughable.

        The rhetoric on both the right and left that liken today's politics to extremism in the 20th century is a ridiculous anachronism that needs to be called out more often.

  • KumaBear an hour ago

    Here comes another person throwing out words like “communism” yet using the term inaccurately. Please invest in a dictionary.

  • tech_ken an hour ago

    Jacobin is to communism as Gary Johnson is to JD Vance. "Left politics" covers a lot of ideologies and they all hate each other.

  • micromacrofoot an hour ago

    The core belief in communism is "collective ownership for the common good" which feels like a far cry from "the literal antichrist is coming."

    I could follow an argument that Jacobin is naive, but it seems silly to make the direct comparison to someone who thinks we're approaching some predictable end of days and say they're the same.

    • MiiMe19 an hour ago

      100M+ dead ideology

      • hearsathought an hour ago

        Not sure why people keep bringing this up. Every ideology has blood on their hands, but communism is nowhere near #1. Try comparing the death tolls/genocides/etc of the capitalist/anti-communist side with the communist side.

        • MiiMe19 21 minutes ago

          Communism and its associated pairings have killed far more than capitalism ever will. Communism only ever exists when paired with an authoritarian government and cannot exist without one. Capitalism can (and does) exist without an authoritarian government. There is a reason why the only people that defend communism have never lived under it.

          • hearsathought 12 minutes ago

            > Communism and its associated pairings have killed far more than capitalism ever will.

            Ever will? The "capitalists" have already killed far more. Did communists wipe out a continent full of native americans? Did communists killed more people than the Nazi germany, the US, british empire, chinese empire, japanese, etc in ww2? Did communists kill more people during both the vietnam wars?

            > Communism only ever exists when paired with an authoritarian government and cannot exist without one. Capitalism can (and does) exist without an authoritarian government.

            Fine, that's an actual argument that can be discussed. But why lie outright about reality. But pretty sure the natives would have loved to live under their own authoritarian government rather than being wiped out by the capitalist paradise.

            > There is a reason why the only people that defend communism have never lived under it.

            Must be why you are so good at lying. Because you grew up under communism?

  • psunavy03 2 hours ago

    Interesting that this is being downvoted considering "Thiel is a right-wing loon" and "Jacobin are a bunch of left-wing loons" are not mutually exclusive statements.

    They're both wrong, just in different ways, and observing this is not "bothsidesism."

    • estebank an hour ago

      Discussing the messenger instead of the message is a common strategy to derail conversations away from the message.

    • noelwelsh an hour ago

      As you observe, the original comment is wrong and as such it contributes nothing useful to the discussion.

    • observationist an hour ago

      Yeah, expect this to get flagged and vanish. This has nothing to do with anything even remotely interesting except to those who are emotionally invested with pwning their political or ideological opposition. At this level of discourse, they're all batshit bonkers.

    • bananapub an hour ago

      it's not interesting at all - the comment is very stupid (jacobin is not "whole journal on literal communism") as well as such lazy both-sidesism everyone is dumber for having read it.

      there's lots of stupid brigading on HN, but sometimes dumb comments get the downvotes they deserve.

aeternum an hour ago

[flagged]

  • scythe an hour ago

    George Soros is 95. Whatever direct influence he ever had as an individual is gone. The OSF marches on but there's just no way he has more than perfunctory control over it.

exogeny an hour ago

Like anything else with Thiel, it's a viewed formed by a socially-maladjusted twerp who was picked on and now wants to rule the world. He's found a lot of useful lieutenants in that quest, mostly because they, like him, resent the fact that no amount of power or money or yes-men surrounding them will quiet their inner insecurities.

The truly insidious calculation they all eventually got to is that in Trump you have someone that is somehow even more insecure and craven than them and can be straight bought and sold to the highest bidder. They give Trump the superficial credibility of having ostensibly smart people behind him, and Trump gives them the benefits of being adjacent to his non-stop corruption and self-dealing machine.

breppp an hour ago

Left wing magazine discovers metaphor; confuses it for Nazism

  • smallnix 39 minutes ago

    Do you mean cause Thiel says he based the core of his beliefs on Schmitts teachings, a fervent nazi? Don't get the connection otherwise.

fidotron 2 hours ago

> This justifies the most extreme violence against his opponents while protecting his own views from contestation. Thiel’s world is a battlefield of moral absolutes rather than a terrain of political complexity where different interests and values are contested and negotiated.

The irony of this being on a site called jacobin is palpable.

  • js8 an hour ago

    I downvoted you. It's well-known that The Jacobin is named after https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Black_Jacobins.

    • shadowtree an hour ago

      Which in turn were named after the original Jacobins.

      ...and man, did Haiti turn out to be a perfect example of Third-Worldism. Ethnocide, ecological disaster, full on regression into a post-civilizational nightmare.