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By Alan Mosley

Palantir CEO Alex Karp’s book, The Technological Republic, is a clarion call for Silicon Valley to abandon its consumer trinkets and rush headlong into the arms of the military-industrial complex. According to Karp, America’s future depends on wielding hard power through technology—arming soldiers, AI-weaponry, and mass surveillance systems—rather than on the “soft” influence demonstrated by free markets and liberty-first principles. The book claims that “the survival of the American experiment depends on the technological revitalization of the military-industrial complex” and urges the country’s engineering talent to focus on national defense. Karp and his co-author, Nicholas Zamiska, argue that tech bros should “grow up” and start killing America’s enemies before they kill us.
This techno-militarism dressed up as patriotic duty presumes that concentration of power in the state and its corporate allies (isn’t there a word for this?) is not only desirable, but morally required. In other words, The Technological Republic is far from a roadmap back to a prosperous America; it is a blueprint for a high-tech Leviathan. As reviewed in January by the Libertarian Institute’s own Laurie Calhoun, Karp’s willingness to aid the regime in its most notorious activities at home and abroad is not because “he is more ingenious or better informed than the competition, but only because he appears to be completely devoid of scruples.”

Alex Karp wiki
Early life

...every single time

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Karp never learned to drive a car. He said, "I was too poor. And then I was too rich.”[[10]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Karp#cite_note-:8-10) He has said that the thought of having children "gives [him] hives".

nut

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As of 2025, Karp is in long-term relationships with two women. He was described as "geographically monogamous".
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What about it?

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147 sats \ 1 reply \ @Entrep 26 Apr

Silicon Valley was built on the idea of Don’t be evil. Replacing consumer innovation with tools for mass surveillance and AI weaponry is a dark pivot for the industry

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If profits can be made from evil, then evil will be done

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75 sats \ 1 reply \ @lunanto 26 Apr

Concentrating power in a high tech Leviathan isn't saving the American experiment, it's ending it.

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Forcing the Southern states to remain in the union ended the experiment

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This analysis gets to the heart of the matter, the danger isn't just in the technology, but in the fusion of state and corporate power. The shift from building for the user to building for the state represents a fundamental change in the Silicon Valley ethos.

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