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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Tech Baron Seeking to Purge San Francisco of "Blues"
If Balaji Srinivasan is any guide, then the Silicon Valley plutocrats are definitely not OK.https://newrepublic.com/article/180487/balaji-srinivasan-network-state-plutocrat
https://archive.ph/alW7q
Balaji Srinivasan speaks during the Singapore Fintech Festival in 2022.
To fully grasp the current situation in San Francisco, where venture capitalists are trying to take control of City Hall, you must listen to Balaji Srinivasan. Before you do, steel yourself for whats to come: A normal person could easily mistake his rambling train wrecks of thought for a crackpots ravings, but influential Silicon Valley billionaires regard him as a genius. Balaji has the highest rate of output per minute of good new ideas of anybody Ive ever met, wrote Marc Andreessen, co-founder of the V.C. firm Andreessen-Horowitz, in a blurb for Balajis 2022 book, The Network State: How to Start a New Country. The book outlines a plan for tech plutocrats to exit democracy and establish new sovereign territories. I mentioned Balajis ideas in two previous stories about Network Staterelated efforts in Californiaa proposed tech colony called California Forever and the tech-funded campaign to capture San Franciscos government.
Balaji, a 43-year-old Long Island native who goes by his first name, has a solid Valley pedigree: He earned multiple degrees from Stanford University, founded multiple startups, became a partner at Andreessen-Horowitz and then served as chief technology officer at Coinbase. He is also the leader of a cultish and increasingly strident neo-reactionary tech political movement that sees American democracy as an enemy. In 2013, a New York Times story headlined Silicon Valley Roused by Secession Call described a speech in which he told a group of young entrepreneurs that the United States had become the Microsoft of nations: outdated and obsolescent. The speech won roars from the audience at Y Combinator, a leading start-up incubator, reported the Times. Balaji paints a bleak picture of a dystopian future in a U.S. in chaos and decline, but his prophecies sometimes fall short. Last year, he lost $1 million in a public bet after wrongly predicting a massive surge in the price of Bitcoin.
Still, his appetite for autocracy is bottomless. Last October, Balaji hosted the first-ever Network State Conference. Garry Tanthe current Y Combinator CEO whos attempting to spearhead a political takeover of San Franciscoparticipated in an interview with Balaji and cast the effort as part of the Network State movement. Tan, who made headlines in January after tweeting die slow motherfuckers at local progressive politicians, frames his campaign as an experiment in moderate politics. But in a podcast interview one month before the conference, Balaji laid out a more disturbing and extreme vision. What Im really calling for is something like tech Zionism, he said, after comparing his movement to those started by the biblical Abraham, Jesus Christ, Joseph Smith (founder of Mormonism), Theodor Herzl (spiritual father of the state of Israel), and Lee Kuan Yew (former authoritarian ruler of Singapore).
Balaji then revealed his shocking ideas for a tech-governed city where citizens loyal to tech companies would form a new political tribe clad in gray t-shirts. And if you see another Gray on the street you do the nod, he said, during a four-hour talk on the Moment of Zen podcast. Youre a fellow Gray. The Grays shirts would feature Bitcoin or Elon or other kinds of logos Y Combinator is a good one for the city of San Francisco in particular. Grays would also receive special ID cards providing access to exclusive, Gray-controlled sectors of the city. In addition, the Grays would make an alliance with the police department, funding weekly policemans banquets to win them over. Grays should embrace the police, okay? All-in on the police, said Srinivasan. What does that mean? Thats, as I said, banquets. That means every policemans son, daughter, wife, cousin, you know, sibling, whatever, should get a job at a tech company in security. In exchange for extra food and jobs, cops would pledge loyalty to the Grays. Srinivasan recommends asking officers a series of questions to ascertain their political leanings. For example: ??Did you want to take the sign off of Elons building?
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The Tech Baron Seeking to Purge San Francisco of "Blues" (Original Post)
Celerity
Dec 16
OP
Strelnikov_
(7,845 posts)1. What the . . .
Sounds like a Phillip K Dick story.
Yavin4
(36,621 posts)2. Amazing that these Tech Bros can create a global image of themselves, but when you scratch the surface...
you often find out that they cannot even write a simple line of code. They're nothing more than rich kids who are investing in companies with their parents' money and connections. There's nothing entrepreneurial about them. At least not in the classical sense that we know the term.