The Nerd Reich – Silicon Valley Fascism and the War on Democracy

(simonandschuster.com)

302 points | by brunohaid 2 days ago ago

207 comments

  • skrebbel 2 days ago ago

    I'm not a big sucker for this kind of un-nuanced "us vs them" rhetoric, but I gotta admit, the title is a stroke of genius.

    • rolandog a day ago ago

      Perhaps the nuance is in the eye of the beholder? I don't think it's sustainable to go about our lives wearing blinders and averting our gaze from the misuse of technology because one might be afraid of unhappy feelings creeping in.

      One must not be so cowardly as to deny that materials and technology can be misused or deny that their purpose is of oppression for fear of being attacked by group-thinkers.

      "The unexamined life is not worth living" as Socrates put it. So, I invite you not play the usual game of narrowly looking at a single if statement and conclude "there's nothing political in this"; but rather look at the bigger picture... the asymmetry in access to information, resources, weapons, and how that impacts everyone's lives...

      If we don't admit that there's a couple dozen people with immeasurable wealth and resources who have questionable intentions and opinions that affect our day-to-day lives, then we won't be able to prevent worse outcomes in a timely manner.

      • tim333 a day ago ago

        >deny that their purpose is of oppression...

        A lot of the uber-nerds are just regular nerds who got lucky, not part of some evil genius cabal. By all means keep an eye on them but I think for the most part they are regular people.

        • nkmnz a day ago ago

          Look at Germany 1933++ and Eastern Germany 1945++ to see how regular people act when they get power over their neighbours. I don’t have a position on the book, but your argument isn’t supporting what you think your position is - quite the contrary.

        • paulryanrogers a day ago ago

          People don't stay 'regular' for long after gaining immense power or money. I imagine it's quite difficult to stay grounded and humble in such situations, especially with legions of sycophants and yes-people hyping them up.

          • lo_zamoyski a day ago ago

            People live mostly by convention, not reason (including those who think they don’t). When social sensibilities change, people move with them regardless of whether they are good or bad, because people in general are cowards. They fear life outside the crowd. For most, majority opinion - whether manufactured or not - is God. Most float downstream (including those who think they don’t); few swim upstream.

        • sunrunner a day ago ago

          Is there anything 'regular' about walking onto stage wearing a cap and sunglasses and then brandishing a chainsaw as a 'symbolic' gesture (at anything other than a chainsaw conference)?

          • leobg 16 hours ago ago

            He was excited about cutting waste and regulation. Most business people wouldn’t be that theatrical about it. But they sure share the sentiment.

          • tim333 a day ago ago

            I'd make an exception for Musk.

        • sgnelson a day ago ago

          See: banality of evil

          • leobg 16 hours ago ago

            Seems like Arendt got it wrong. She let herself be fooled by Eichmann. He wasn’t banal at all.

            Bettina Stangneth, “Eichmann Before Jerusalem” (2014)

            https://newcriterion.com/article/the-profundity-of-evil/

            • spopejoy 8 hours ago ago

              Stangneth seems like an important thinker, but wow that article hasn't aged well. Talking about the "profundity" of Hamas evil with nary a mention of Israeli genocide. You can say September 2024 was too soon to tell ... but it wasn't actually. Pure islamophobic propaganda.

          • pigpop a day ago ago

            it's almost like the people you call evil are just regular people

            anyone can be evil, anyone can be good, anyone can be both even on the same day or be seen as one contemporarily and the other historically

            so perhaps painting specific groups of people as the incarnation of pure evil is not a good idea

            unless you're trying to sell a book or get ad revenue

            • Arainach a day ago ago

              You've misunderstood the point of historical absentee analysis and rhe banality of evil.

              It is comforting to think that there is a group of "evil people" who are innately different, but most evil is done by people similar to people you know.

              Just because your neighbor Joe or your aunt Bertha is a "great person" who coaches the local sports team doesn't mean they aren't evil if they also spend their days working to target minorities and get them thrown in jail or worse - or building the tools used for authoritarians and voting for them.

            • rolandog 11 hours ago ago

              > anyone can be evil, anyone can be good,

              Not to be dismissive of your point, but this may be a thought-terminating cliché. That's not an argument that would hold up in court against pedophiles and murderers; I would argue that it shouldn't also hold for fascists.

              The last one... well, we thought that decent people were the norm and that people would understand the nuance and spirit of laws; however, that hasn't been the case, so you see evil fascists skirting by because they're convinced that "the letter" of the law didn't specifically ban something, so it must be permissible.

              > so perhaps painting specific groups of people as the incarnation of pure evil is not a good idea

              Sorry to burst your bubble, but people consistently doing evil things that don't course-correct once exposed to new information are evil; those are the people we're referring to... (i.e. "a turd by any other name would smell as shit").

              "We live in a society", we have a sort of social contract with each other (meaning, it's in our best interest to be nice to one another) and laws that we follow (in case someone isn't following the former).

              I think most people would agree that 10 or 20 years ago, we'd be (mostly) lineally progressing towards peace and unity (glossing over some wars, as most people wanted to believe that "once that is over, we can proceed with 'progress'")...

              Most people believed it so, that we didn't really give any attention to people that asked "what do we do if the fascists rise to power?"... Many laughed it off! "Fascists!? That's SO 1930's Europe! Besides, everyone knows that fascists are evil, and no one wants to be evil, right?".

              So, you can imagine that almost nobody had "coordinated fascist international takeover" nor "brainwashed pedophile-apologist fascist takeover of the US" on their bingo cards. Interesting times...

            • lo_zamoyski a day ago ago

              The line between good and evil runs through every human heart.

              • whattheheckheck a day ago ago

                Which means we need to blatantly and explicitly call out the ones who are choosing to use their evil side for outsized material gains at the expense of a huge majority?

                • mc32 19 hours ago ago

                  People are motivated by things other than material gains. The hong wei bings were not motivated by material gains. they were motivated by the four olds --erasing the four olds.

        • array_key_first a day ago ago

          They're some of the most powerful people in America and, by extension, the world. Wielding such power required immense restraint, control, and consideration.

        • e40 8 hours ago ago

          I completely disagree with this thesis. In my years as a founder (>40), it was very clear when I saw many forks in the road. One would lead to me getting more wealthy and one would lead to me being able to sleep at night. I chose the latter. Clearly the tech titans have chosen the other path.

          I also witnessed many other founders doing really terrible things. It’s a meme around here that technical founders mostly get screwed by the time IPO or M&A proceeds are divvied up. I saw that time and again. Yes, there are exceptions, bit they are rare.

          EDIT: was on mobile, wanted to add more:

          IMO, the system we have sorts for sociopaths. The people with the power (politicians, CEOs, etc) are far more likely to be sociopaths than in the regular population because the rewards are so great. Look at the Paypal "mafia" (as they are called by many), and their exploits after Paypal.

          Here's the way I look at whether someone got lucky or not: were they a 1-hit wonder or did they serially create companies with vast wealth? The former are people that got lucky. I've known some. The latter are mostly sociopaths. I've met many. They are predators. Some of them actually triggered my flight/flight response, and until that happened the first time, I had never in my life (in a business setting) experienced that. I now know what it means, when I feel that feeling. What is interesting is that my body sometimes knows it before my brain.

        • hulitu 17 hours ago ago

          > A lot of the uber-nerds are just regular nerds who got lucky, not part of some evil genius cabal.

          With the help of the CIA. /s

    • sillyfluke a day ago ago

      >I'm not a big sucker for this kind of un-nuanced "us vs them" rhetoric

      Everyone usually has this stance by default until they think some batshit crazy redlines have been crossed regardless of what end of the political spectrum they reside in and decide to adopt an "us vs them, hope for peace, prepare for war" approach.

      I'm sure you have some "if they actually do <xyz> then I'll adopt a more alarmed stance" line in the sand, it's just drawn at a different point probably. That's why it's best to talk specifics of the case instead of declaring an abstract high-road stance.

      • skrebbel a day ago ago

        You misunderstand my point. I made no remark about whether big tech bosses behave harmfully or not (and in fact I believe that many do). My point is about blaming “nerds” or “Silicon Valley” for power grabs by a few asshole billionaires.

        As a nerd running a startup, I dislike the tendency of many journalists to blanket blame “nerds” for the behavior of nutjobs like Musk. It’s pure “us vs them” thinking, blaming the group for the behavior of a few.

        • sillyfluke 13 hours ago ago

          Fair enough, but you have to admit it's virtually impossible to infer your two paragraphs here from that one sentence above. The calling out of "us vs them" rhetoric is what's stated clearly (as well as the fondness for the title).

    • zrn900 a day ago ago

      The uncomfortable reality is that there does exist an 'us vs them' situation in every other aspect of society today, and those who ignore it end up on the losing side.

      • tremon a day ago ago

        It's not new. Quoth one of the best lyricists of the past century:

        > There is a war between those who say there is a war and the ones who say there isn't

        - Leonard Cohen, 1974

      • dialup_sounds a day ago ago

        A statement so vague and ominous it could have been uttered at any point in human history by persons of any ideology without loss of meaning.

        • sigwinch 11 hours ago ago

          Yet you have to admit that 4 days lecturing about the Antichrist is an order if specificity greater than the tangle of European alliances before WWI.

    • nephihaha a day ago ago

      There is a better one. It was about how the far right was trying to take over Furry Fandom... The title was "the Furred Reich".

      • sillyfluke 13 hours ago ago

        hah, had to look this up to make sure this was a real thing. But disagree on which is better, the Nerd Reich has a better ring to it. When you say the other one out loud it sounds like "deferred Reich".

    • kgwxd 6 hours ago ago

      Not really, the "nerds" aren't in control any more. It's just typical assholes, cosplaying as "nerds", ruing everything.

    • jamil7 2 days ago ago

      It's cute but are there any actual nerds left in big tech leadership? Of the magnificent seven we basically only have Jensen Huang left as a technical leader and maybe you can count Zuckerberg.

      • disgruntledphd2 a day ago ago

        > maybe you can count Zuckerberg

        I think that you definitely need to count him. He's always been a massive nerd, his attempts to bulk up and become a MMA competitor notwithstanding.

        • lagniappe a day ago ago

          >his attempts to bulk up and become a MMA competitor notwithstanding

          a lot of us nerds value physical strength, it's 2025, we're not mouthbreathers anymore.

          • RealityVoid a day ago ago

            My body is just the vehicle that carries my brain around - and my brain deserves a smooth, luxurious ride.

          • disgruntledphd2 a day ago ago

            > a lot of us nerds value physical strength, it's 2025, we're not mouthbreathers anymore.

            Sure, I don't disagree. I just put that in to prevent people from claiming he was a jock now because of that (which would clearly be absurd).

            • JuniperMesos a day ago ago

              The nerd/jock dichotomy is at best loosely pointing at some genuine clusters of interests and predilections that exist among people in the world, and is more often taking a set of tropes from 80s Hollywood movies about high school and using them to try to explain how real people in the world are today, which is stupid.

              (Who wrote all those 80s movies? Bookworms! Who acted in them? Theater kids!)

              • tekla a day ago ago

                The jocks at my school (Championship Winners) were also simultaneously the smartest kids at it. Most went to Ivy Leagues on academic scholarships. I know a few of them were the first engineers on several well known unicorns.

                • lo_zamoyski a day ago ago

                  The nerd/jock dichotomy is rooted in envy.

                  There is an unspoken presumption many people live believing that the various qualities people can have must be evenly divided among people, because somehow it would otherwise be “unfair”. Got brawn? Can’t have brains. Got X? Can’t have Y. Etc. It’s a coping strategy for weak people with big egos.

                  The fact is that in primary school, a “nerd” wasn’t necessarily all that “intelligent” even in some narrow sense. If you are inept at something or insecure about it, you might gravitate toward things that avoid it. So you invest time in that activity.

                  Of course, if the brain is the seat of intelligence, and the brain is just a part of the body, and an intelligent brain is a healthy brain, then it follows that a healthy body overall is more likely to have a healthy brain and thus an intelligent brain. Conpare this with the ancient expression “Mens sana in corpore sano”.

              • Der_Einzige a day ago ago

                Life imitates art. The dichotomy is stronger than ever especially with the rise of incel rhetoric in mainstream circles.

              • lo_zamoyski a day ago ago

                Indeed. People who use this terminology in earnest have a maturity problem. It’s a juvenile way of classifying the world that silly people like to use to channel their petty resentments and envies. Time to grow up.

          • expedition32 a day ago ago

            I couldn't care less about muscles but I do go to the gym 3 times a week.

            My dad died from a heart attack in his fourties and my mom only has 30% lung capacity left thanks to smoking.

            Your health always catches up with you and it's better to prevent trouble.

      • tim333 a day ago ago

        Google has some tendencies - Sundar Pichai was a materials engineer, Brin is back working there who considers himself a computer scientist. Maybe Hassabis - depends how you define it I guess.

        • ycombigrator a day ago ago

          Hassabis is absolutely a nerd. Joint honours physics and maths from Oxbridge and a PhD in neuroscience (and a Nobel prize in none of these fields).

          His driving interest was always games (master standard in chess at 13, five-time winner of the all-round world board games championship, video game programmer in his teens then his own studio in his 20s).

          He's the end game boss of nerdland.

          • tim333 a day ago ago

            Yeah but the dictionary has "intellectually passionate but socially awkward, or someone considered unstylish and lacking social skills". I think he might be a bit social.

        • myvoiceismypass a day ago ago

          I thought it was super cool when a few years ago I found out that Eric Schmidt was the author of Lex! I struggled mightily with lex and yacc in college, but that was a me thing, I think.

      • Lerc a day ago ago

        When I watch Ex-machina the degree to which I loathed Oscar Isaac's character surprised me. While much of it was because the character was objectively loathsome, part of it was because I felt the type of person he represented was infecting the tech world.

        The thing that seemed really inconguous to me was that he actually made the amazing tech. I don't think I have ever encountered a personality like that who actually made things. Certainly I've seen them talking about how great the thing they made is, but invariably, to them, I made means 'my employees made'

        Which is not to say that there aren't toxic people who do actually make things. They exist, but it presents somewhat differently to the 'Tech bro' archetype.

      • sam-cop-vimes a day ago ago

        It shouldn't matter whether the leaders are actual technical nerds. They are highly focused and motivated individuals who are harnessing tech for the stated purpose. Maybe this is by design and a coordinated movement - or maybe it is the inevitable consequence of uncontrolled and unregulated capitalism.

        If profit maximisation is the ultimate goal every smart individual chases, the current trajectory seems inevitable?

      • pjc50 a day ago ago

        Carmack? Also ended up drifting right, but you can't fault his technical credentials.

        Wozniak is still alive and seemingly not in the rightwing set, although also too retired to count as "leadership".

        • sillyfluke a day ago ago

          Yeah, as I recall Carmack came out against some of the anti-trust actions of Lina Kahn, soecifically blocking certain type of acquisitions and mergers by big tech companies.

          Though I'm curious what the take of "founders first" type of VCs like YC on the Figma IPO is, after the acquisition by Adobe was blocked. Whatever the stock price of Figma is now, would they specifically argue that of the two outcomes the Figma IPO was worse for the founders? To be clear, if that acquisition wasn't blocked the IPO wouldn't have happened.

      • wtcactus a day ago ago

        One of the reasons I enjoy coming into HN. Is to read comments stating that the guy that created Facebook, alone in his dorm room, could “maybe“ be counted as a tech lead.

      • jve a day ago ago

        Elon Musk must be one. Seems enough techy to me: Tesla, SpaceX, Starlink - software being used for the hardware in innovative ways.

        Edit: Oh, wow, mentioning this guy is surely controversial, sorry. However discussing whether he is a nerd, understands engineering on very deep level/gets his hands dirty OR he only manages people - there must be some psychological aspect related, a form of disagreement to discredit or have a hard time believing it can actually be true.

        Here is a list of credible persons commenting on Musk whether he understands engineering or not. With all the sources: https://www.reddit.com/r/SpaceXLounge/comments/k1e0ta/eviden...

        • robocat a day ago ago

          The list is missing my #1 quote from Jim Keller (an epic engineer type) although unfortunately quote is in middle of a long YouTube vid. See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33662764

          Aside: I don't understand why they even mention what journalists think - only engineers opinions matter when judging engineering ability.

          • jve 16 hours ago ago

            Middle of a long YT video is nothing: you can make links to auto seek to a specific place in YT video. When you share link on computer, it even allows you to check-a-box that will include timestamp within link

            Or append &t=1h2m3s to the link to prevent writing long sentences on where to seek and save users from manual seeking :)

        • FranzFerdiNaN a day ago ago

          Maybe he used to be one, who knows. But I doubt he read a book or seen a movie in the past few decades. He got roasted by Joyce Carol Oates on X recently for being an oaf and he immediately started replying to tweets about acclaimed movies. And nothing insightful that proved he had seen them, just 'this is a great movie' or some other stupid oneliner. It would be hilarious if it wasnt so sad that the richest man on earth is such a pathetic little man.

        • xg15 a day ago ago

          I think Elon Musk just wants to be Tony Stark and cultivates the appropriate image for that.

          And possibly a genuine obsession with (rightwing-ish) meme/youth culture, which I think got him a lot of his initial followers on twitter/reddit/4chan/etc.

          • ben_w a day ago ago

            A lot of people miss how much of a tit Tony Stark (at least the Robert Downey Jr. version) was.

            Smart, but not as smart as he thinks he is. Not good with anything interpersonal. Flair for the dramatic (and dad jokes) at the expense of those working with him.

          • shawn_w a day ago ago

            He thinks he's Tony Stark but he's actually Justin Hammer.

          • actionfromafar a day ago ago

            Is there a difference? I mean, he may be Tony Stark to himself but end up an oppressor to others.

          • tim333 a day ago ago

            Musk is a complicated character. He's had nerdy times programing, fascist turns including the famous salute, emperor delusions - he was named after The Elon, a fictional ruler of Mars.

        • adev_ a day ago ago

          > Elon Musk must be one

          Spoiler: He is not. But he is very good at faking it.

          Anytime he tries to give a serious opinion on anything related to computers: It is laughably bad and out of touch (SQL, compilers, languages, performance, etc... ).

          He definitively has a scientific background but definitively not "Tech" as far as computer are concerned.

          • Treegarden a day ago ago

            I don’t see how “tech” is limited to software. While your case might be made for software, according to many accounts Musk is a strong driver on the hardware side. For instance, I’ve read the Tesla and SpaceX books by Eric Berger, which are much more focused on technical things compared to the more mainstream books. And while Musk is not in the trenches with a screwdriver, he’s not faking it either.

            To be honest, I’m actually interested in this hypothesis: is he legitimately skilled/knowledgeable, or is he indeed faking it? And for either side I would like to see evidence. This question is interesting to me because some of his companies have made substantial contributions to pushing the frontier of technology (reusable landing, high launch cadence, electric cars, energy).

            If he is really faking it, that might even be good, because the success of his companies might be replicable and could continue without him. But what if he is not?

            • adev_ a day ago ago

              > or is he indeed faking it ?

              On a domain side to nerdery: video games. There is zero doubt he is faking it entirely.

              The streams he publishes on game like PoE or Elden Ring, have been long commented on online boards

              https://www.reddit.com/r/EnoughMuskSpam/comments/1hwe0id/elo...

              And honestly, I can understand it entirely.

              He has a public image of "geek/need hero" that is honestly inspiring. And that benefits him a lot because it bring people to trust his decisions. He has all the interest of the world to maintain this image.

            • petra a day ago ago

              There was a podcast with Mark Andreesen, the VC, and he said that Elon has deep understanding and involvement in the technical side in his companies.

              • anthem2025 a day ago ago

                Wow if Marc Andreesen said then it must be true.

            • freilanzer a day ago ago

              > some of his companies have made substantial contributions to pushing the frontier of technology (reusable landing, high launch cadence, electric cars, energy).

              People he hired for these companies made contributions.

              • Treegarden a day ago ago

                Can you elaborate how this relates to his own competency?

          • delichon a day ago ago

            Unlike the more common pattern, Elon doesn't hesitate to make straight up engineering decisions for his businesses, including ones that look unnecessarily high risk to a lot of his own engineers. Chopsticks catching spaceships made of stainless steel and self driving cars without lidar are well known examples. The success of those choices earns him legit nerd cred.

            • mikkupikku a day ago ago

              Self-driving cars without LIDAR was a pure cynical business decision and hasn't worked well technically.

              • delichon a day ago ago

                Disagree. The current limitations of Tesla self driving are not around difficulties in judging distances that lidar solves. They're around inference deficiencies with accurate geometry.

                • tim333 a day ago ago

                  It must be a bit embarrassing having Waymo and Baidu cracking ahead with the driverless taxis while the Tesla ones still don't work well though.

                • ben_w a day ago ago

                  If the AI was good enough, vision-only self-driving would be at least as good as the best human.

                  The AI isn't good enough. I'm starting to suspect that current ML learning rates can't be good enough in reasonable wall-clock timeframes due to how long it takes between relevant examples for them to learn from.

                  It's fine to lean on other sensory modalities (including LIDAR, radar, ultrasound, whatever else you fancy) until the AI gets good enough.

                  • delichon a day ago ago

                    It's safer than human drivers now. That's good enough. It will take more than that to convince world, and it should. I applaud the well earned skepticism. But I'm an old guy who has no problem qualifying for a driver's license, and if you replaced me with FSD 14.2, especially under not ideal conditions like at night or in a storm, everyone would be safer.

                    I predict a cusp to be reached in the next few years when safety advocates flip from trying to slow down self driving to trying to mandate it.

                    • ben_w 6 hours ago ago

                      I can't speak to your driving level, but everything I see about Tesla's FSD has unfortunately been giving me "this seems sus" vibes even back when I was extremely optimistic about them in particular and self driving cars more generally (so, last decade).

                      Unfortunately, the only stats about Tesla's FSD that I can find are crowd-sourced, and what they show is that despite recent improvements, they're still not particularly good.

                      Also unfortunately, the limited geo-fencing of the areas in which the robo-taxi service operates, and that they initially* launched the service without the permits to avoid needing a human safety monitor, strongly suggests that it hasn't generalised to enough domains yet.

                      Lack of generality means that it's possible for you to be 100% right about Tesla's FSD on the roads you normally use, and yet if you took them a little bit outside that area you might find the AI shocking you by reliably disengaging for no human-apparent reason while at speed and leaving you upside down in a field.

                      * I'm not sure what has or hasn't changed since launch: all the news reporting on this was from sites with more space dedicated to ads than to copy, so IMO slop news irregardless of if it was written by an AI or not

                  • Starman_Jones 10 hours ago ago

                    No reason we can't rely on other sensory modalities after the AI "gets good enough," either. Humans don't have LIDAR, but that doesn't mean that LIDAR is a "cheat" for self-driving cars, or something we should try to move past.

                    • ben_w 10 hours ago ago

                      In principle, I agree; but remember that people like to save money, and that includes by not spending on excessive sensors when the minimum set will do.

                      What I think went wrong with Musk/Tesla/FSD is that he tried to cut costs here to save money before it would actually save money.

                • mikkupikku a day ago ago

                  LIDAR provides dense point clouds from which you can derive geometry that Tesla's vision methods struggle to perceive.

                  (Subtle things, like huge firetrucks parked straight across the road.)

            • adev_ a day ago ago

              As far as physics is concerned (his initial background), he definitively is knowledgeable for a CEO yes.

          • n4r9 a day ago ago

            Good example if anyone wants it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZslebJEZbE

          • sam-cop-vimes a day ago ago

            It doesn't matter. He knows enough to be able to harness it for realising his worldview - and that is the problem.

          • mikkupikku a day ago ago

            > Elon was an enthusiastic reader of books, and had attributed his success in part to having read The Lord of the Rings, the Foundation series, and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.[11][28] At age ten, he developed an interest in computing and video games, teaching himself how to program from the VIC-20 user manual.[29] At age twelve, Elon sold his BASIC-based game Blastar to PC and Office Technology magazine for approximately $500 (equivalent to $1,579 in 2024).[30][31]

            I think it's fair to say he at least was a nerd. He was a dweeb getting beaten up in school, burying himself in books and computers at home. His skills are doubtlessly outdated now, but does that really mean much? Woz's skills (which to be perfectly clear, outclassed Musk's by miles) are doubtlessly out of date now too, but nobody would say Woz isn't a nerd.

            I think the part where he grew into an unstable dirtbag might be influencing the way people see him now. Saying that is is, or at least was, a genuine nerd shouldn't be seen as any sort of excuse for his scamming, lying, etc.

            • sidibe a day ago ago

              He definitely has talked about a lot of nerdy books. Don't know about his attention span and not sure how to square what he likes with his values. He brings up the Culture all the time but I have my doubts that he's actually read them

              • mikkupikku a day ago ago

                I don't know either, I haven't read the Culture books (yet) either so I can't really evaluate that.

                I do believe he read a lot of sci-fi in his youth, if only because that would fit the pattern of a young boy who doesn't get along well with their peers and turns towards solitary pursuits like computer programming. He seems exactly the sort to have read lots of Heinlein.

                • ben_w a day ago ago

                  Almost everything about The Culture will be immediately apparent from stuff Musk talks about, but only about half of it would look like he's understood it.

                  The only real crimes are reading/writing someone's brain without permission (at which point others may call you names and stop inviting you to social events) or destroying a consciousness without backups (where you'll get permanent supervision to make sure you don't do it again). Most biological citizens have a full-brain computer interface for backups and general fun, called a "neural lace".

                  The AI Minds in charge of everything give themselves fanciful names, which Musk has used for his SpaceX drone ships.

                  For the reverse:

                  Almost every biological citizen is gender-fluid, can change physical gender by willing it, and there's a certain expectation that you try things both ways around so you know how to be a good lover. They dislike explosive population growth regardless of if it's organic or machine reproduction, and as everyone can get pregnant if they want to (because everyone can be a woman if they want to and it all works), it's considered quite scandalous to have more than one child.

                  It's sufficiently post-scarcity that money is considered a sign of poverty. They mostly avoid colonising planets, instead living on ships, or on habitats so large that if one was located at any Earth-Sun Lagrange point (including the one on the far side of the sun), we could see it.

          • tim333 a day ago ago

            He wrote and sold his first software aged 12. He may not be very good with computers but does have some nerd origin.

          • imtringued a day ago ago

            Elon Musk is probably one of the most cutthroat businessmen on the planet. His skills don't lie in technological implementation whatsoever.

            Martin Eberhard was the technical co-founder of Tesla and Elon Musk is trying his best to erase his contributions to Tesla.

            • irthomasthomas a day ago ago

              Eberhard and Tarpenning where the co-founders. Musk was an early investor, became the third CEO, and then sued to claim co-founder status.

            • adev_ a day ago ago

              Yes. As far as business is concerned, facts speaks for themselves.

              But that has nothing to do with the valley chips and computer nerdery

        • happymellon a day ago ago

          Except that he didn't invent any of it.

          Just a savvy investor, and as far as I understand, hasn't really worked on any of it. His contributions were rants until he just took ketamine.

          His work was making a yelp clone.

          • tim333 a day ago ago

            He invented the very successful hyperloop.

            • happymellon 12 hours ago ago

              He also successfully managed to invent a company that takes government contracts and fails to deliver to block momentum for public facilities.

              (Boring company...)

            • youngtaff a day ago ago

              I know it’s sarcasm but he didn’t event invent it… just promoted it to undermine high speed rails

            • beAbU a day ago ago

              Did you forget your /s ?

              • tim333 a day ago ago

                I guessed people would figure that.

      • alecco a day ago ago

        Zuckerberg? The genius coder according to the movie. Programming in PHP.

        • nmfisher 20 hours ago ago

          There are numerous criticisms you can level at Zuckerberg, but writing the first version of Facebook in PHP is not one of them.

        • lagniappe a day ago ago

          Are you new? PHP was the standard for that type of app at the time.

          • JuniperMesos a day ago ago

            And that was really bad, although Mark Zuckerberg himself can hardly be blamed for that.

          • orzig a day ago ago

            Your point is 100% correct, but for the sake of our discourse please strive to be more polite!

            • lagniappe a day ago ago

              I'd prefer you focus your attention elsewhere

        • myvoiceismypass a day ago ago

          At the time your choices for dynamic server web apps were php or perl. The LAMP stack (Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP or Perl) was very popular back then (early to mid 00s)

    • scandox 2 days ago ago

      Classic example of humour as stop-think

      • skrebbel 2 days ago ago

        You're replying to a single-sentence comment that both calls out the ridiculousness of this book's argument and its funny title. Clearly I can hold two ideas in my head at once and maybe, just maybe, other people can too.

        I struggle to imagine that anyone not already sympathetic to the high school classic "nerds suck" world view is going to suddenly be swayed by this funny book title.

      • sach1 2 days ago ago

        Classic example of motivated reasoning as stop think. Condescend at your own peril.

        • scandox a day ago ago

          As far as I knew I was agreeing with the commenter not condescending. The title is a great example of it's kind. It's funny enough to stop one interrogating the proposition it makes.

  • xg15 a day ago ago

    > "The Sovereign Individual" by James Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg.

    Lord William Rees-Mogg being the father of Jacob Rees-Mogg, of Brexit fame.

    Interesting how often you meet the same people if you just start digging a little.

    • pjc50 a day ago ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sovereign_Individual : 1997, since I had to check.

      > Interesting how often you meet the same people if you just start digging a little.

      Endemic problem in UK politics, and a lot of other countries.

      • WickyNilliams a day ago ago

        I think it's lost on people outside of the UK - perhaps even to many inside the UK - just how strongly there is a class divide and a ruling elite. The old money is very old indeed

        • amiga386 a day ago ago

          Indeed. You are literally likely to be in a better social class today if your ancestors were Normans conquerors rather than the Anglo-Saxon conquered.

          https://eprints.lse.ac.uk/60593/1/__lse.ac.uk_storage_LIBRAR...

          • WickyNilliams a day ago ago

            Thanks that sounds fascinating. Will take a look

          • nkmnz a day ago ago

            Actually, that 0.7 intergenerational correlation only tracks surnames—i.e., the male line. It completely ignores the fact that ~50% of the population changes status by marriage, which is invisible in surname analysis. Think about it: when a blacksmith’s daughter marries a baron, her social mobility doesn’t show up anywhere in the data. She just becomes part of the baron’s lineage going forward. So Clark has discovered that patrilineal dynasties persist with 0.7 correlation, and then presented this as if it were a measure of social mobility. It’s not. It’s a measure of surname mobility. If assortative mating across 500 years averaged something like 0.5 (plausible—people married outside their exact status all the time), the actual population-wide status persistence might be closer to 0.4 than 0.7. That’s… a completely different story about how stratified society actually was. But sure, “elites persist for centuries” makes for better book sales than “we measured half the mobility and ignored the other half.”

            • amiga386 13 hours ago ago

              I think you're overestimating how far families married outwith their class. Given the scandal of Mrs Simpson or Ms Markle, how often do you think Barons married commoners? It's the stuff of fairy-tales.

    • nephihaha a day ago ago

      That's how and why they get published. Little names don't get in there. I haven't read the book so can't judge the content.

      • drcongo a day ago ago

        This is the book that introduced the idea of disaster capitalism - how to profit from other people's misery.

        • bigyabai a day ago ago

          Formerly known as opportunism.

  • konart 2 days ago ago

    >democracy is being dismantled not by coups or tanks, but by code, capital, and the illusion of innovation

    Not sure "code" belongs here. Even less sure about "illusion".

    Take those away and what is left is "dismantled... by capital". Nothing new, really.

    • edu 2 days ago ago

      Code absolutely belongs there. Like any technology (be it printing presses, weapons, or algorithms) code is neutral by design, but not by impact.

      It can bolster democracies or undermine them. The real agency lies with those who wield it. And it's rarely the coders. It's the leaders, the platforms, the systems that choose how code is deployed.

      • pjc50 a day ago ago

        Does open source code count as "capital"? It also has a real and significant effect.

      • konart a day ago ago

        That's my point. Any tech can (and is) used for this. There's really no point in putting word "code" there. It adds very little additional context. Only in my opinion mostly serves the other goal - to sell.

        • mc32 a day ago ago

          You can argue the same for the capital that goes in. It’s used for what it’s used. By itself it’s neutral.

          • dataflow a day ago ago

            I don't think you can make this argument. Capital is neither neutral, nor a technology. Currency would at least satisfy one of those two. But capital is a broader concept that is pretty much by definition a form of power, and power's natural tendency is to lead to corruption.

          • konart a day ago ago

            Yes, but I think that questions like

            1. How come people are able to accumulate so much capital?

            2. How come people are able to use the capital to influence life of other people in all ways possible to their liking?

            are more interesting and worth asking.

            Yes code and capital are both "tools". But you can't just write some code and install cameras at every corner. You need some political influence to do so. And capital buys you this influence.

            • Arainach a day ago ago

              >How come people are able to use the capital to influence life of other people in all ways possible to their liking?

              This sentence applies to "code" as well as to "capital"

            • mc32 a day ago ago

              It’s a power distribution law. You can try to influence it artificially and suppress it to varying results.

              It’s kind of like asking why are there so many small quakes and why do there have to be great big quakes once in a while? Why don’t we just get millions more small quakes instead?

            • jmye 9 hours ago ago

              And yet you can “just write some code” and weapons a generation of young men, and cause an incredible increase in depression in a generation of young women.

              Pretending code has no direct and obvious impact is rank naivety.

        • croes a day ago ago

          By code doesn’t mean all code it just describes the modus operandi to distinguish them from the old type that used oil for instance

          • konart a day ago ago

            Again, this is my point: there's no real reason to distinguish them from the old types. :)

    • lm28469 15 hours ago ago

      Have you heard about palantir ? Flock? Prism?

      One day you're chasing terrorism, the next you're chasing ecologists, political opponents, unions, minorities, &c.

    • BirAdam 21 hours ago ago

      If we’re being honest, democracy, such as it is, is being dismantled by people. Code, capital, and illusion have no volition.

    • amiga386 2 days ago ago
    • arthurofbabylon 2 days ago ago

      It sounds like this book would be a good candidate for your reading list.

      • konart a day ago ago

        It would be great if you have tried to express yourself other than some weird implications.

        • arthurofbabylon a day ago ago

          The comment is sincere. You appear to disagree with the book’s argument prior to having heard it — a great candidate for a mind-opening read. If the book (once published) proves its premise, you’ll disproportionately benefit from the read. (I personally like it when a book stretches my existing conceptions.)

          • konart a day ago ago

            I thing you might have misunderstood me.

            I do not disagree with the book's argument. I'm just pointing out (or rather expressing my doubt) that the word "code" brings no additional context to the sentence.

            As others (and I) rightfully noted - code and modern tech does make things cheaper and easier, but this can be said about all advances.

            The "nerd reich" is not possible without code, code is not possible without computers, computers are not possible without abacus etc.

            As I see it the word "code" sells this book better than, say, "taxes". Because taxes are boring and obvious.

    • jelder a day ago ago

      The purpose of software is to reduce the cost of change.

      Of course “code” belongs here.

      • mariusor a day ago ago

        I take parent's meaning to be that "code" is redundant in the repetition not blameless.

        • konart a day ago ago

          Yes, thank you.

    • croes a day ago ago

      And how did they get those capital, for instance the CEO of Meta?

      And isn’t social media that prefers rage over information a danger to democracy?

      • konart a day ago ago

        >And how did they get those capital, for instance the CEO of Meta?

        This is the right question.

        I'll quote myself here:

        1. How come people are able to accumulate so much capital?

        2. How come people are able to use the capital to influence life of other people in all ways possible to their liking?

        Yes code and capital are both "tools". But you can't just right some code and install cameras at every corner. You need some political influence to do so. And capital buys you this influence.

        And to get this capital you should have laws that allow you to do so (tax rates, evasion etc).

        Same goes for political influence.

        • Arainach a day ago ago

          >Yes code and capital are both "tools". But you can't just right some code and install cameras at every corner. You need some political influence to do so. And capital buys you this influence.

          You absolutely can. Tiny tweaks to social media feeds - what content gets promoted, what gets hidden - have massive impacts on opinions, votes, and society.

    • fakedang 2 days ago ago

      And why not code? Are facial recognition models, AI LLMs to spew out spam and addictive social media algorithms not backed by code? The kings and dictators of the past had a lot more capital than Silicon Valley, but could only dream of building such surveillance and propaganda capabilities, as is the case even in a number of tinpot dictatorships in the developing world.

      • konart a day ago ago

        >Are facial recognition models, AI LLMs to spew out spam and addictive social media algorithms not backed by code?

        Sure, just like tank is backed by metallurgy and engineers.

        >The kings and dictators of the past had a lot more capital than Silicon Valley, but could only dream of building such surveillance and propaganda capabilities.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_Richelieu (and not only him most likely) would disagree.

        Soviet union had surveillance and propaganda capabilities you can't even imagine without any of LLM etc.

        Surely new tech makes things easier and cheeper, but doesn't change the basic principles.

        My point is exactly this: code makes things move faster for everyone, so you can really remove if from the sentence and nothing will change. In adds no meaningful context. It mostly sells.

        • fakedang 4 hours ago ago

          If Cardinal Richelieu had today's tracking, he'd be on another level. As would the Soviet Union - imagine being able to crush opposition in the satellites without any violence. Heck, no need to imagine - Russia already does that today. Simply put, with today's social media tech, backed by today's code, there would be no Walesa, no Nagy, no Soviet dissolution, nothing.

    • nephihaha a day ago ago

      It is being dismantled by those who claim that the public can't have a say but that we should go to "official sources" (government appointed) or "trusted sources" (their pals) to avoid misinformation. This isn't capitalist driven (the standard Marxist line) because this system limits profits and maximalises government control.

    • tim333 a day ago ago

      Most of the real democracy dismantling attempts in the world seem more along the lines of the Russians centuries old effort to have everything loyal to the Tzar, including Trump.

  • tim333 a day ago ago

    There's a youtube interview with the author here https://youtu.be/FWjR6_qYJAw?t=44

    A lot seems about Curtis Yarvin and fans thereof.

  • cadamsdotcom a day ago ago

    Unfettered capitalism is great under certain conditions. Amazing things get invented & rolled out to the world.

    When conditions change, cracks appear..

    For many reasons we appear to be in an era of slower growth, but shareholders used to growth are still demanding it. That’s sticking business leaders in a really tough place.

    The incentives need to change - whether through legislation, or market demands. Until then it’ll be less leg room on flights, more “offers” when you just opened your banking app to pay a bill, and more sanctioned spam in your inbox.

    I truly believe plenty of folks are fed up and a backlash is coming that’ll be a mix of legislation and companies emerging that cater to informed customers. I’m optimistic!

    • lm28469 15 hours ago ago

      > Unfettered capitalism is great under certain conditions. Amazing things get invented & rolled out to the world.

      That's a really naive take, for you to enjoy this "ideal capitalism" there are hundred thousands of people who've been seeing and feeling these cracks for decades if not centuries, it's just slowly reaching your neck of the woods

  • wolvesechoes a day ago ago

    Problem is not with nerds or Silicon Valley, even if Thiel is a lunatic. Problem are, and always were, obscenely wealthy people destroying the society that created them. In the world where greed is not considered sin anymore, or even a character flaw, they don't even need to pretend anymore.

    • _DeadFred_ a day ago ago

      Crazy to live in a time less moral than the robber baron age. That said, our society made a joke of children making our shoes in miserable conditions, so we have been conditioning ourselves to be ok with this on our own and for a long time.

  • lapcat 2 days ago ago

    Is there a HN convention for links to books?

    This book appears to be available only for preorder now, not yet published. Nobody here has read it, nobody here can read it, and even if they could, this submission will disappear off the front pages before commenters have a chance to order and read the book. Thus the comments section here is going to be useless (or at least more useless than usual).

    • ManlyBread a day ago ago

      I don't know what happened to this website but stuff like this keeps hitting the front page more and more often despite having close to zero value. It feels like SEO spam to me.

      • sillyfluke a day ago ago

        Yes, the bad link given here doesn't do the content justice, whatever your opinion would be. It would've been better to link to one of the author's articles on the Nerd Reich website (or something more substantive like his newsletter content). I'm assuming you're talking about the link itself as opposed to the content of the book or topic in general.

      • lapcat a day ago ago

        "Please don't post insinuations about astroturfing, shilling, brigading, foreign agents, and the like. It degrades discussion and is usually mistaken. If you're worried about abuse, email hn@ycombinator.com and we'll look at the data." https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

        The person who submitted the link already explained the submission: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46068363

        • ManlyBread 15 hours ago ago

          Except there's nothing to discuss because the book is not released. Is HN about "awareness" now? Why not come back in 2026 when the book is actually released and people can actually talk about the contents of the book?

          • brazukadev 11 hours ago ago

            This is not a Show HN, just a link. Users engage if they want, and a lot of them wanted.

    • adamors 2 days ago ago

      I wanted to disagree then checked the release date. It’s August of 2026. Really early to be discussing this.

    • pcrh a day ago ago

      Perhaps a link to the author's website and podcast would be more appropriate?

      https://www.thenerdreich.com/

    • brunohaid 2 days ago ago

      Very good question - posted it for awareness / sparking hopefully nuanced “are we the baddies here?” reflection in the community, and curious folks to preorder.

    • arthurofbabylon 2 days ago ago

      The comments section here is a phenomenal expository of biases, for the very reason you cite.

  • angelfangs 12 hours ago ago

    What's the actual factual accusation here? That monied interests converge on the ruling power? How is this different when the 'opposition' is in control? As conditions for the middle class continue to deteriorate, isn't it normal that companies that depend on middle class purchasing power try to adjust government buttons and levers to assure their continuation and position in the market? The 'holier than thou' is showing.

  • roenxi 2 days ago ago

    I would assume by default that billionaires are politically active and causing a problem. However this link doesn't give a lot of hints about how or wherefore. I assume this is a jab at Thiel; but it is a bit light on in the synopsis department.

    There are a huge number of threats to democracy and the biggest one is probably the total lack of principles and common sense possessed by the median voter. It is a real problem and a bigger one than some billionaire or even the consensus of the billionaires. Sometimes voters and capital come into actual conflict and generally the voters tend to win Pyrrhic victories when that happens.

    • arthurofbabylon 2 days ago ago

      1. Consider preordering the book if you're already reacting to part of its premise; it should be a juicy read.

      2. Regarding the power of billionaires vs the power of the median voter, consider that each lever in a system deserves attention before pulling on it or reconfiguring it. How can one determine "the biggest threat to democracy" without digging into the details?

    • GJim 2 days ago ago

      > the biggest one is probably the total lack of principles and common sense possessed by the median voter.

      Hard disagree.

      The biggest problem is a misinformed electorate.

      An accurate, honest and truthful press is vital for democracy; how else do people know whom to vote for! The fact this is being dismantled (often supplying deliberate misinformation) is truly worrying.

      After all, the electorate is entitled to have a lack of principles and no common sense; nobody ever said democracy was perfect. However the electorate needs to be provided with an honest set facts on which they can base their decisions without cries of "fake news". Whatever their political leanings.

      • _heimdall 2 days ago ago

        I don't know if you will find a time in US history where the press was accurate, honest, and truthful.

        I agree with GP that a primary missing feature is a principled public - without principles people swing wildly in opinion depending on the topic and popular rhetoric.

        I see this with much of my own family. They mostly consider themselves conservatives and Republicans of the small government and balanced budget era. Those presumed values go out the window though and when a particular political topic of the day comes up they seem to completely contradict it. The most egregious example in my family is a Ron Paul libertarian that somehow still holds those opinions while supporting virtually everything Trump does.

        • GJim a day ago ago

          > I don't know if you will find a time in US history where the press was accurate, honest, and truthful.

          1) Spare us the US defaultism!

          2) If we are going to make this conversation about the USA, didn't US broadcast media have a 'fairness doctrine' that was abolished some years back? Hence the growth in outlets providing heavily biased dishonest news on broadcast media? I suggest this has driven much of the popular rhetoric of which you speak.

          Frankly, every country has seen a growth in biased social media "news" sources regardless as to the broadcast media fairness doctrines that still exist in those countries. Deliberate misinformation and a lack of trust in journalism is real.

          • _heimdall a day ago ago

            The topic is Silicon Valley fascism, this isn't the crusade to fight USA defaultism.

  • lil-lugger a day ago ago

    My cousin suddenly has been very captured and obsessed by an area of opinion I didn’t have a name for, fixed money supply, all inflation inherently bad, Elon Musk is badly treated, longer government terms (which sounds reasonable initially until you actually think about just having LESS democracy), no minimum wage. After some research it’s definitely coming from influencers linked to the SV techno feudalists - it’s just such a strong change. But you realise real power is only useful if people can come along with you - if you can build support with the public…

    • cloverich a day ago ago

      Sounds loosely libertarian, but the longer terms one is new. Its long appealed to technical folks because of its simplicity and ability to address a wide swath of policy issues.

      It took me a long time to break myself out of it. I think key was getting into the deep details of passing actual policies that would have enough popular support to be sustainable, to realize its ultimately just naive/simplistic thinking, thats another impractical ideology under the hood, dressed up as something more meaningful.

  • seydor 2 days ago ago

    I think it's simpler,money has no Color, no religion.

    Silicon valley just happened to reside next to the hippies in the first decades

    • podgorniy a day ago ago

      Now it goes beyond money: they are aiming at shaping societies. From mars colonies (imagine musks tantrums when they vote him out) to project 2025 type of political works.

      When you have too much money, it's kinda boring to keep making more of them. You want self-expression to the max extent the society will allow you.

      • seydor a day ago ago

        I don't think those pass the sniff test, but grand narratives help to fuel the stocks and invesment bubble

    • sach1 a day ago ago

      So why would it take off there instead of in a larger city with more resources?

      I'm not disagreeing with you completely, but I would like to know more about what other factors you would consider to have been more impactful. I don't know that you really need hippies around to get that kind of 'california capitalist' mentality either tbf.

      • seydor a day ago ago

        It won the transistor lottery, then the money oiled the machine.

        Recent events prove that there was nothing ideological about it. Once a positive feedback loop is established, it's difficult to break

  • noduerme 2 days ago ago

    I know it's fashionable to say that democracy itself leads to these outcomes that destroy democracy. I think Arendt was right about self-colonization and overproduction of elites being the main thing that leads to totalitarianism. There wouldn't even be such a thing as a silicon valley billionaire if the United States wasn't the most wildly successful political entity for the past 2000 years. Power corrupts, but that's distinct from an argument that the systems which created it in this case should be replaced by systems that funnel power in other ways.

    • pjc50 a day ago ago

      There's some complaints about this book not being out, but Arendt's book has been out since 1963 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eichmann_in_Jerusalem#Banality... and is highly regarded reading on this subject.

    • wolvesechoes a day ago ago

      > Power corrupts

      It doesn't, although they would like you to believe so, so you avoid obtaining it.

      But it definitely attracts those corrupted.

      • TeMPOraL a day ago ago

        It does, by its very nature. Power is not magic, nor is it the Force. It's not a quantity you can stockpile and own - power is leased, it's granted to you by other people. It comes with expectations on how you will wield that power, and usually can be taken away just as quickly as it was granted, if you exercise it in ways they don't approve[0].

        Power is obtained through meeting people, gaining their favor, entering deals, providing them services, eventually joining their ranks and advancing to the next level on the ordinal scale. Especially in politics, "power corrupts" by definition; by the time you gain any, you're so thoroughly entangled in mutual deals and friendships with other players you're no longer an autonomous entity - and if you're not willing to do that, you will never be given the opportunity to advance.

        --

        [0] - Yes, there are caveats and strategems one can use to hold on to power - usually by playing people against each other to coerce ongoing support; every history period and every movie with a villain has plenty of examples. It's another discussion; my focus here is on what power is, and where it comes from.

      • delichon a day ago ago

        You don't believe that there are people who honored a principle until temptation became to strong? Only people who pursued the temptation?

        • TeMPOraL a day ago ago

          False dichotomy; power is not a stockpilable quantity, it comes from other people and their willingness to defer to you or entertain you. Compromising is not a temptation to get power quicker - compromise is power, it's how you acquire it. The more you want to lean on the system to help you, the more aligned you need to be with it, eventually becoming one with it; you sacrifice autonomy at every step of the way.

      • im3w1l a day ago ago

        Whenever I heard that expression I have never perceived people to mean "so don't obtain power". More like, "if you do get power be careful". Or "even if he seems like a nice guy, we should maintain a separation of powers".

        Like it's more a force than a destiny. Gravity pulls the moon down every day yet it doesn't fall on our heads.

    • delichon 2 days ago ago

      > There wouldn't even be such a thing as a silicon valley billionaire if the United States wasn't the most wildly successful political entity for the past 2000 years.

      It's less wildly successful as a political entity than Christianity or Islam.

      • noduerme a day ago ago

        I'm not talking about the number of impoverished converts or believers. In terms of prosperity and global power, no religion or former empire has come close.

    • andsoitis a day ago ago

      > There wouldn't even be such a thing as a silicon valley billionaire if the United States wasn't the most wildly successful political entity for the past 2000 years.

      I don’t know that I would position the USA in this way.

      Different metrics lead to different “winners”:

      Longevity: Imperial China

      Institutional legacy: Rome

      Global reach: British Empire

      Scientific/cultural transmission: Islamic Caliphates

      Modern dominance: United States

      Another lens:

      * Rome & China = stability, governance, internal cohesion.

      * Britain & the US = networks, capital markets, technology leverage.

      * Caliphates = knowledge platforms, cosmopolitan integration.

  • expedition32 a day ago ago

    Nerds who were bullied at school and weren't picked in gym class style themselves the new SS.

  • jmclnx a day ago ago

    I would not call these people "nerds", many are entitled bros (gals?) with rather rich parents. If you look at many of their family history, their parents are well into the upper middle class, borderline rich. In most cases, they went to the best schools.

    It just so happens, tech is were the real money is now. If this was 40+ years ago, they would have ended up on Wall Street or Madison Avenue.

  • sershe 20 hours ago ago

    In less than a page, they call it feudalism, fascism, and capital(ism) / corporate rule. Mussolini in his manifesto explicitly defined the 2nd in opposition to the 3rd among other things, and even Marx considered the 1st and the 3rd to be very distinct. Of course the 1st and the 2nd are also quite different.

    So which one is it? Oh wait, it's a modern progressive, "calling everything I don't like every bad name I remember from high school history"! Are they also nativist globalists and authoritarian libertarians? I bet they are!

  • keernan a day ago ago

    I'm no historian, but has there ever been a society in world history that wasn't dominated by a 'privileged few'?

    Weren't the 'rules' of the United States of America written by wealthy white males who excluded women, non-whites, and the non-wealthy (eg non-land owning) from participating in the new nation?

    As much as the worldwide turn to fascism worries me, I don't see the lives of most people in the world changing very drastically from any other time in history. Maybe the openness by which the privileged exercise their power is a bit higher on the historical scale, but the lives of the non-privileged, world wide, really don't change much over history. Sure, the invention of fire, electricity, etc benefitted all of mankind, but the distinctions of 'how life is lived' between the privileged and the non-privileged has always been dramatic.

    • lunar-whitey 8 hours ago ago

      The United States from 1945 to about 1970 made a fair amount of noise about broadening the scope of the franchise. This certainly was not the norm historically, but contemporary ambivalence about that project is what leads us to this article today.

  • grigio a day ago ago

    It seems nicer than the Woke Reich

    • Jordan-117 a day ago ago

      Say what you want about "woke" (assuming you can define it), but its worst excesses were curbed by democratic elections.

      What's the endgame of a movement that seeks to discredit, overturn, and functionally control elections?

    • tastyface a day ago ago

      Enjoy your subjugation!

    • Der_Einzige a day ago ago

      This exact thought is the human death drive externalized and is responsible for a lot of human misery in the world. Shame on those who unironically believe it.

      The excesses of the Weimar Republic did not justify the subsequent events. Not even close.

    • bigyabai a day ago ago

      It's been 10 years, and I have still yet to hear any two people define "woke" the same.

      • wtcactus 10 hours ago ago

        It’s been 10 years and I have still yet to ear anyone on the far left defining what is a woman without using the very word “woman”.

        Meaning: if you think the majority of people will be coerced to normalize this all insanity being pushed by a bunch of mindless Marxists living under the prosperity of capitalism, you will be sorely disappointed.

        The USA just elected 2 communists for mayors (they don’t even hide it anymore) but here people are trying to tell us the real issue with present society is fascism.

        I’ve seen how that game plays out: and it’s not pretty.

        • bigyabai 3 hours ago ago

          > The USA just elected 2 communists for mayors (they don’t even hide it anymore) but here people are trying to tell us the real issue with present society is fascism.

          Italy had elected dozens of communist and socialist leaders, including mayors, in the 1940s. History does indeed blame the fascists for cooperating with the Nazis, not the minority parties.

          If you think the historians framed the wrong guy, that's news to me. Show me some evidence that fascism is a smaller threat to America, I love a good argument.

          • wtcactus an hour ago ago

            You've misinterpreted my point. But, I'll start by addressing your statement that fascism is so much worse than communism: It's not, all numbers from the 20th century show us that communism is even worse than fascism... and that's a very though target to beat.

            But about my point. My point is not preferring fascism to communism: any kind of collectivism is equally bad and only brings pain and misery to the people.

            My point is that presently, communism is a much bigger threat since you have a lot more communists in positions of power than fascists. Sure, it's fancy to now call fascist to anyone that defends basic common sense measures that were accepted by any Democrat as obvious under Clinton (you know, things like meritocracy, praising hard work, incarcerating violent offenders, keeping borders secure and expecting people to work in order to get money... all big red fascist flags nowadays), but you don't have single person in any real position of power of public exposure telling you proudly they are fascists.

            But boy, you do have a bunch of them telling you they are "socialists", or "Marxists"... and now, you even have some telling you outright they are communists. Let's get this straight, the amount of propaganda reached such a degree of insanity in the USA, that you now have people, openly admitting they are communists without any repercussions. They are even getting elected for public office.

  • nephihaha a day ago ago

    This is far more similar to Communism than Fascism. Their mentality is that they are a scientific vanguard (like Marxism) and that the ends justify the means. They also share the binary thinking of Marxists. They part company with Fascism because most of them are internationalist.

    • brettermeier 13 hours ago ago

      MAGA spam bot?

    • wolvesechoes a day ago ago

      Go read some books first.

    • drcongo a day ago ago

      As Marx so famously wrote, all the wealth earned by the people should be concentrated into the hands of a few chosen elites.