The Anti-Intellectualism of Silicon Valley Elites
8 hours ago
- #Silicon Valley
- #Tech Oligarchs
- #Anti-Intellectualism
- The author critiques Silicon Valley elites for displaying anti-intellectualism, drawing parallels to Richard Hofstadter's work on the subject in American culture.
- Tech oligarchs, like Suno's CEO Mikey Shulman, dismiss deep intellectual work (e.g., music creation) and devalue learning for its own sake, favoring digitization and monetization.
- Examples include Peter Thiel opposing college, Marc Andreessen avoiding introspection, and AI executives promoting chatbots that weaken critical thinking and encourage sycophancy.
- Silicon Valley's anti-intellectualism is rooted in privilege, with tech leaders outsourcing thinking, surrounding themselves with yes-men, and fearing upward mobility through education.
- The myth of the self-made man persists among tech elites, who deny societal contributions, evade taxes, and advocate for oligarch-led utopias like a 'networked state.'
- Tech oligarchs oppose unions, disparage humanities while relying on them for AI development, and engage in faux-populist rhetoric without supporting working-class education or rights.
- Reactionary gender ideologies emerge, with tech bros valuing physical strength over intellectual pursuits and dismissing education as useless as women earn more degrees.
- Curtis Yarvin symbolizes this trend, promoting autocratic rule by tech CEOs and viewing democracy as a hindrance, with elites prioritizing profit over civic engagement.
- The author argues that intellectualism is essential for liberal democracy, warning that tech elites' power and disdain for constraints pose a threat to societal progress.