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Billionaire Technocrats Pile On The Trump Train, Led By Peter Thiel And J.D. Vance

22-7-2024 < Attack the System 40 546 words
 




In Peter Thiel’s eyes, he has scored the major coup of his lifetime in taking over the Republican party for Technocracy. Read this article and ponder: “Because JD Vance, the new potential VP, is Thiel’s creature. He is a man Thiel molded in his own image through lavish investments in his business and political careers.” Thus, the Populist movement has fully merged with Technocracy to move forward as Technopopulism. 

President Trump is a willing participant and has lavished praise on Thiel, Vance, and Elon Musk, who has also endorsed Trump with a pledge of $45 million per month.


Who is Peter Thiel? Hang on to your hats. Tomorrow’s story will go a deep dive. ⁃ Patrick Wood, Editor.




Less than a month after Donald Trump was elected president in November 2016, he invited the cream of Silicon Valley’s tech elite to a meeting at his transition team’s headquarters at Trump Tower.


It was an awkward affair. Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg, Google’s Larry Page and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos had facial expressions that ranged from a semi-rictus grin to full tech-mogul-in-a-hostage-situation. But then, in a sense they were. There was a new sheriff in town – and none of them had seen him coming.


But one person was in his element. Seated next to Trump, uncomplicatedly beaming, was a South African-raised tech entrepreneur whose early investment in Facebook had made him billions.


This was Peter Thiel. And if this past week marked an inflection point, and there are many reasons to believe it did, the seeds of it were planted in the summer of 2016. This was when Trump was the outside candidate. The man no respectable west coast tech entrepreneur or east coast business elite wanted to touch.


Last week marked a decisive end to that era. A week in which Donald Trump not only appointed a tech bro to be his second in command, choosing Senator JD Vance to be his VP, but in which he received the benediction of the tech bro-in-chief, Elon Musk.


Musk has said he will donate $45m a month to Trump’s campaign, though his ongoing endorsement on X, the platform he bought and owns, is worth countless millions more.


But it’s some lesser-known figures in Silicon Valley who last week boarded the Trump bandwagon who are perhaps even more telling. Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, who own one of the most storied and influential venture capital (VC) firms in Silicon Valley, have declared they’re all in for Trump alongside a host of lesser-known but important names who have either followed suit or who beat them to the punch, including the Winklevoss twins and investors and podcast hosts Chamath Palihapitiya and David Sacks.


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