Tech Won't Save Us - Peter Thiel is the Real Antichrist w/ Gil Duran
Episode Date: November 20, 2025Paris Marx is joined by Gil Duran to discuss how Peter Thiel’s bizarre obsession with the antichrist is really a desperate and embarrassing attempt to divert attention from his own misdeeds. Gil Du...ran writes The Nerd Reich and is working on his first book, The Nerd Reich: Silicon Valley Fascism and the War on Global Democracy. Tech Won’t Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Support the show on Patreon. Exclusive $45-off Carver Mat at https://on.auraframes.com/PARIS. Promo Code: PARIS The podcast is made in partnership with The Nation. Production is by Kyla Hewson. Also mentioned in this episode: Gil wrote about Peter Thiel’s Antichrist obsession and the apocalypse capitalism of Silicon Valley. This link is for Peter Thiel (or any Silicon Valley millionaires who may be listening); Gil recommends a brush-up on the French Revolution. Steve Bannon expects to go to prison. Donald Trump’s relationship to crypto continues to be awful.
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Teal believes we're headed toward a massive scapegoating of some kind.
And he has a terror that Silicon Valley billionaires are going to be the scapegoats.
Probably because they're not actually the scapegoats,
they actually are to blame for a lot of our problems today.
And what he's trying to do is manipulate or manufacture a case for placing the blame elsewhere.
Hello and welcome to Tech Won't Save Us, made in partnership with The Nation magazine.
I'm your host, Paris Marks, and this week my guest is Gil Duran.
Gil writes the Nerd Reich newsletter and is currently working on his first book, which is called
The Nerd Reich, Silicon Valley Fascism, and the War on Global Democracy.
I believe it will come out later this year.
Gil is also a former opinion editor at the Sacramento Bee, an editorial page editor for the San Francisco Examiner.
Now, as you've probably heard, Peter Thiel likes to talk about the Antichrist, and he gave a series of lectures earlier this year in September, I believe, where he, I guess, discussed his ideas for the Antichrist, what it is, the significance that it has for us today, and of course how it fits into his broader fascist political project and how he is trying to use this concept to basically administer.
advance his political aims to protect his power, to increase his power, and that of his other
Silicon Valley billionaire friends. I wanted to talk about this at the time, but I figured it might
be best to wait to see how things percolate after he gave those lectures so that we can
discuss the bigger picture and actually understand what he's trying to do here, how this
fits into the broader Silicon Valley project. And Gill is great at giving that insight, because
he has been looking into the ideologies of these Silicon Valley billionaires for quite some time.
So through this conversation, we don't just discuss the lectures that Peter Thiel gave,
but we connect it to ideas from people like Mark Andreessen or Bellagy Srinivassan and this broader
ideology that we hear these Silicon Valley billionaires spouting as they try to defend their
interests, as they try to advance their political project. And that means not just working with
the Republican Party and Donald Trump, but as Gil talks about in this episode, trying to
buy influence with the Democratic Party as well. And Gil has a lot of critical things to say
about how the Democratic Party has been too close to Silicon Valley to Silicon Valley billionaires.
And right now, you know, isn't offering an inspiring, hopeful message that can actually
bring people in that could try to bridge political divides and build a broader constituency by going
after not just Donald Trump, but these tech billionaires as well and the things that they are doing
not just to the United States, but so many different parts of the world. So ultimately, I think this
was a fascinating conversation. There's some great insight in here about the worldviews of these
tech billionaires that, of course, we talk about on the show a lot, but that this discussion about
the antichrist and the religion behind these things really helps to add another dimension to
through this conversation. So with that said, if you enjoy this conversation, make sure to leave a five-star
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Thanks so much and enjoy this week's conversation.
Gil, welcome back to Tech Won't Save Us.
Thanks for having me.
Absolutely.
Really happy to talk to you in the past, to learn about your insights on Silicon Valley
and what all these billionaires are up to.
But as I think many listeners of the show will know, Peter Thiel has recently done this series of lectures on the Antichrist.
I guess it's a couple months ago now.
But, you know, I kind of wanted to sit and kind of see how these lectures hit the public and what the discussion was going to be.
And so I'm happy you can join me now so we can dig into it.
And maybe I would start by just asking, were you surprised to see Peter Thiel give a series of four lectures on the Antichrist when this was announced?
and when it became clear that he was doing this? Or is this kind of something that he has been
discussing for a while at this point? It is something he'd been discussing for a while. I was surprised
to see him do it in San Francisco. He must have known there would be a reaction that it would get
more attention and negative attention than his previous talks. This is something he's been
talking about for a few years. It's an obsession of his. But he seems to be now refining it and
trying to come to some kind of final point. And when I saw that he was going to do it,
my worry was that nobody would pay attention. So I started a bit of a drama campaign to
hype it to make sure people understood how weird this was. And the media did end up covering it
quite a lot. It was not unusual for him to speak about the Antichrist in terms of that's something
he often does, but he seems to be escalating what is this very kinky pseudo-intellectual
obsession. And I don't think it went very well for him this time around.
Gotcha. Yeah, he's certainly a guy who likes to think of himself as like this real intellectual
of Silicon Valley, right? You know, that he understands these concepts so much deeper that he
has like done this kind of extensive read him, that he sees himself as kind of like, I guess,
a tech philosopher in a sense, right? It's really how it comes across.
He fancies himself that way and others flatter him as that. But I find,
his intellect to be very hollow. He only focuses on a few things that are his obsessions,
and those things aren't really worthy of such intense focus for somebody who's not really
religious. If you look at, you know, I interviewed an Antichrist historian about this stuff,
and he was just laughable. He's acting like a snake handler in Kentucky. That's the level of his
discourse. You know, I grew up in the Catholic religion. I grew up in a very apocalyptic doomsday,
And I remember being a kid worried about this stuff, and you get older, and you're like, okay, well, there's more of the Bible than just the doom talk. Not only that, but the Antichrist only appears in a couple of places. And he's conflating it with the beast of revelation, which some religious people do. But there's no evidence that those two things are the same. And the Antichrist is not necessarily some figure. It could be anybody who's against Christ, all of the people who are against Christ. And in any case, it's a very strange subject for a billionaire who most fit.
It's the description of Antichrist to be lecturing everybody else on it.
And it's really curious as to why he is so insistent on making everybody think about this
particular subject.
Truly.
And I want to dig into that further.
So in your view, why is he so obsessed with this concept of the Antichrist?
Why is this something that he is fixated on for so long?
Heal is obsessed with the idea of scapegoating.
His obsession comes from René Gerard, who was.
a professor. He was fascinated with it, Harvard, who wrote that humans have a tendency in
societies to find scapegoats for their problems and to punish those scapegoats in order to
try to alleviate the anxiety and tension in society. Teal believes we're headed toward a massive
scapegoating of some kind. And he has a terror that Silicon Valley billionaires are going to be
the scapegoats. Probably because they're not actually the scapegoats, they actually are to blame
for a lot of our problems today.
And what he's trying to do is manipulate or manufacture a case for placing the blame elsewhere
on Greta Thunberg, on government, on regulation, on anything but Silicon Valley.
It's a weird form of projection and effort to escape the blame while also making it entirely clear
who should be blamed.
And it's strange because I can't think of a worse spokesman.
person for Christianity than Peter Thiel, right? On so many levels, he would be rejected by
actual doomsday Christians, mostly because he's a gay man, which I don't have a problem with
that, but a lot of the people whose language he's trying to speak do have a problem with that, right?
I mean, I grew up hearing people say that, you know, gay people were going to go to hell. I'm sure
Peter Thiel grew up hearing that too. And obviously, he internalized this in some kind of bizarre,
traumatic way, and he's now spouting this. But I think at the heart of it is an understanding
that we are coming to a breaking point soon. And the most likely target of our collective
anger is going to be the people who have stolen everything from us and are now trying to steal
even the future. Yeah, I think you put that really well. And as I listen to you describe it,
it really brings to mind to me, as I guess someone who's writing I'm more familiar with,
stuff that Mark Andreessen has been writing the past few years as well, you know, going back to
his techno-optimist manifesto that seemed very much, you know, not just based around holding up
and arguing for the tech industry and the tech billionaires and what they're doing, but again,
trying to like identify those enemies and those people for the supporters of this vision of
technology that someone like Mark Andreessen would want to see to kind of go after, right?
you know, the Luddites and the communists and all this kind of stuff that he was calling out there
and saying that tech ethics was like a great enemy, this seems very much aligned with some of the
things that Teal is kind of pointing out as, you know, as a potential like form of the Antichrist,
I guess, based on reading some of what you've written. Yeah, it's good to be bad and it's bad
to be good. Seems to be their motto, which sounds a lot like something the Antichrist would say,
you know? Yeah, the technical optimism manifesto from Andres.
which quotes fascist philosophers, by the way, deals Antichrist lectures, quote, fascist philosophy.
He's obsessed with Karl Schmidt as well as René Girard.
You know, Carl Schmidt was this Nazi jurist and philosopher whose main idea was that politics
is an existential battle between friend and enemy, often using religious symbols in a political
fashion, towards some state of emergency where the rules are suspended.
and power is seized by a leader, right?
And that's very much at the heart of his Antichrist lecture.
They're very concerned with who has power in the future,
who owns the future, as Jaron Lanier put it.
They're obsessed with that.
And so they're trying out different flavors of this.
There's the Antichrist brand.
There's the techno-optimist brand.
There's the Elon Ketamine Space Travel brand.
There's the Brian Johnson Live Forever brand.
Silicon Valley is in the middle of a psychotic.
an existential crisis, and they are looking for God and they are looking for eternity, and they're
looking for trillions of dollars, and they are trying to drag the rest of us along into this
with them, right? Because Silicon Valley does have a lot of power to influence what's happening
in politics, in media, and in the world. And that's why I decided to write so much about the
Antichrist in Peter Thiel. People were like, why are you keeping writing about this? Well, I'm trying
to expose what they're doing, because I think there's power in exposing propaganda techniques.
This is memetic warfare. That's what they call it, right? This is hyperstition. They're attempting
to manifest a reality. And I wanted to show people, this is what they're doing. Like when you see
a magic trick video on TikTok and then someone shows you how the trick worked before you couldn't see
it, and now you can see that there's a cup in the cup or whatever, that's what I'm trying to do
is do the TikTok video where we bust the magicians.
And that's not hard to do if you look at what they're doing
and if you put that in the context of what they're after and who they're quoting.
Fascists.
You know, who mixes fascism and Jesus?
The Nazis did.
I just saw an interview the other day with Alex Karp, of course, you know, the CEO of Palantir,
where again, he was saying, oh, he's not a Nazi, but he talks to Nazis all the time.
And, you know, it kind of doesn't understand.
why they get such a bad rap or something.
And it's just wild to see them, I don't know,
so kind of explicitly making these allusions and connections to Nazis,
when their politics seem so clearly aligned with a fascist project,
it just blows my mind how open they seem to be able to be about it.
Yeah, to me, they're making a big mistake of overexposing themselves,
which is good, right?
I think the more they talk, the more they show their craziness,
the less people will feel any sympathy or compatibility
with their worldview. A good case in point is Curtis Jarvin, who started giving all these
interviews after being this mysterious dart elf or whatever, and he's a completely long-winded,
boring, charmless dork who laughs at his own jokes through most of his talking and filibusters constantly.
And he went all the way to getting a New Yorker profile that was pretty much the end of Curtis Jarvin's
aura, right? He was completely exposed.
is an out-of-control weeping bore.
And I told Curtis Jarvin this.
We were corresponding.
I was trying to get him to do an interview with me.
And I said, you know, we were bantering.
And I was trying to get him to keep talking.
And he did an email anyway.
Before I came back to journalism, I did PR for many years for politicians.
I was like, you're breaking a cardinal rule here.
You're way over-exposed, right?
You're just yammering on, taking any debate.
You sort of become a circus act for any kind of mid-tier, low-tier intellectual who needs
a little juice on social media, go debate Kerber Sjarvin. He wanted to debate me, actually.
I was like, that would reduce my value to be seen on stage with you. So no, go debate someone at
Harvard. But they're all doing this. And the more they talk, carp, I didn't really know what his
deal was. And seeing him walk around talking about his Nazi friends and his stupid vest, this just
ruins their image and shows you how weak they are, how thin their thinking is. And
how imminently defeatable they will be once people wake up to what these people have in mind,
right? They are way vulnerable to actual pushback, which is why it's sad that the Democratic Party
has no spine and no brain, because we should be hitting these people hard already.
I want to come back to that point just a little bit later after we dig into this stuff a bit more.
I've talked to a number of people on this show about this in the past, about kind of how we see
more and more, I feel like, these tech billionaires and people in the tech industry, embracing
religion and embracing faith in a way that I feel like we haven't seen for a long time, right?
And it seems to be like ascendant in a way that seems a bit surprising, especially when,
as you've been discussing, we see the ways that they're trying to use religion, you know,
use these concepts of the antichrist. How do you see these tech billionaires kind of justifying
or explaining their religious belief, and how do you see them using that toward their own ends,
I guess?
They seem to be trying to solve for what they call a God-shaped whole in their lives,
but I'd argue that there's also a human-shaped hole in many of their lives.
And this could be a little unfair, but I largely see their public professions of newfound
Christianity is entirely fabricated as sort of an op.
They understand, and if you listen to them and you read what they have been talking about for
years, they understand the power of religion, the power of religious narratives to motivate
movements, to motivate action.
Why would anybody follow you or believe you should be in control of the world unless they
believe you are a divine or moral authority?
Right.
So if you're into authoritarianism, you need this idea of the divine order.
You need this idea of a belief that goes beyond the earthly plane.
And so I think that's a part of it.
They are glomming on to this because it's the most accessible narrative.
But if you look at the Silicon Valley version of Christianity, who does it center?
It centers Silicon Valley, millionaires and billionaires.
Peter Thiel actually said during his anti-Christ lecture that the people in that room,
because it was this new tech Christian organization called Act 17, acknowledging Christ
in technology and society, started by the and-rule guy's wife, Trace Stevens' wife,
right, who says, you know, I'm an arms dealer and a Christian. This is his message. And he said,
the people in this room gathering to hear him speak are doing more important work than any
Christians anywhere else in the world. And that seems to be their mentality. Christianity is another way for
and to be special and to be important and to be more important than everyone else. And again,
having grown up in Christianity and having a deep appreciation for the words of Jesus Christ,
if there is an Antichrist, and I'm not saying there is, because again, I'm not religious and I don't
think it's a particularly helpful framework. If there is an Antichrist, the Antichrist is very
clearly Silicon Valley in the 21st century. They are in every way against the words and the
teachings of Christ. Elon Musk's cut to U.S. Aid at Doche,
based on the ideas of Curtis Jarvan, who was funded and supported solely by Peter Thiel,
has already killed. Those doge cuts have already killed 600,000 people, and are projected to kill 14 million
people by 2030, and many of those will be children. So what would Jesus do about USAID, right?
So these people are not Christian in my book. They are manipulating religious symbols in an effort
to gain power, and I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that they are trying to merge
with the Maga movement, which has a base of religious extremists who are its most powerful component.
And so in a way, what they're trying to do is be like, hello, fellow Christians, but I don't think
people are really buying it. When you hear them talk about religion, they are way too florid and animated
and self-righteous. It seems like a bit. Again, I wouldn't pretend to be a pious Christian. I haven't
been to mass for the long time. I don't really claim to be a religion of my birth. But I think
there's a guy in the Bible who says you're not supposed to pray out in public like the
hypocrites do, that you're supposed to do it quietly, and that the real meaning of it all is to be
as Christ was, and that even a godless person who helps the poor is more Christian than the
holiest man in the temple? Who was it who said all that? I forget. Maybe someone in Silicon Valley
can remind me. And even when I hear you say that, and I want to pick up on what you were saying
about, you know, how they're trying to get in with this MAGA movement. But like, the idea that,
like, you would kill one person and that should be, you know, you should be sent to prison and
you should be held to account for doing something like that. Like, obviously, this is deemed to be
one of the worst possible crimes that you can commit in our society, right? But you can make a
decision as someone like Elon Musk does to pull this funding for aid, for food, to starving people,
for medications for people who need those medications to be able to survive, to live a good life.
And as you're saying, you can not just kill, but severely impact millions of people around the
world and just move on, live your life. No one's really going to try to hold you to account
for having done that. It's hard to wrap your head around, really, when you think about it.
You know, when you talk about Elon Musk and the USAID cuts and the kind of devastating human
toll that that has, it's hard to see how someone like him can just go on living in the world
and continue to, you know, continue to have so much power to continue control these companies
potentially become a trillionaire now as we're seeing, like, I don't know, it's hard for me
to really grapple with that one.
The USAID cuts are Silicon Valley genocide.
If 14 million people die, which is what the Lancet projects, that's more than double what Hitler killed in the Holocaust, and it's being done through policy, unnecessary policy, unwise policy.
USAID isn't just about helping poor people. It's about American power around the world. It's how we gain and curry favor. It's how we make people think we're good and show that we care about more than just invading and extracting, right? And there's a lot of critiques of USA and the way it's been used to further U.S. interests.
But if you're running the federal government, you're supposed to be further in U.S. interests, right?
So in two ways, this is a very bad, suspicious policy.
I would be in favor of feeding and helping people survive anyway.
And by the way, these are people who are so worried about the decline in the human population, allegedly, and feel like we don't have enough people.
Then why are you killing 14 million of them, right?
And that gets to the heart of the matter, which is that these are not white people.
The people they want on earth are white people.
So I think there's going to have to be accountability at some point for all of this.
And we can't take anything they say at face value, whether it's claiming to be Christian
or claiming to worry about the world population, because everything they do is the opposite
of what they say they want to do.
And it really exposes the rotten heart of what's going on on Silicon Valley.
This has gone so much farther than it should have.
Literally, this policy will kill 600,000 people, and the reward for that is becoming a trillionaire.
Yeah, it's disgusting.
Like, it truly is.
It turns your stomach just to think about it.
You mentioned before we get onto this subject how these people are kind of using Christianity, it seems, you know, rather than really deeply believing in what it says, what you would imagine actually comes along with believing in a faith like this.
And, of course, we can clearly see even the Pope himself, if, you know, if you're.
or a Catholic, or if you follow that, you know, increasingly calling out the tech industry and
what these people are doing, right? The effects of their worldviews and their actions. But, you know,
one of the things that you mentioned there was obviously you have this MAGA movement, this national
conservative movement that has aligned itself with Donald Trump and that it feels like a number
of these tech billionaires who have also embraced Donald Trump are trying to get in with. But that
relationship seems to have some clear tensions, right, between these national conservatives and
these supposedly Christian Silicon Valley folks. What do you see in kind of the tensions between
these two groups? And what's your read on what's going on there? I think for all their flaws and for all the
ways in which I disagree with the religious conservatives, I think they are smart enough to understand that
these tech billionaires are not like the rest of us. And what they want is not what any of us want, right?
I have a very different conception of the future than my MAGA ex-brother-in-law, right?
But if I were to tell him, we should destroy the United States, he would be very upset by that.
And by the way, so would I, right?
And I know all the flaws of this country, all the terrible things it's done.
It's still my country.
And you're taught to love your country and that you want to make your country better somehow.
We have different definitions of what that is.
These guys don't believe in this country, these tech billioners.
They want a post-America future, a post-democracy future.
They think the founding fathers were cucks.
They think the Constitution is tole paper.
You know, it's analog, right?
They're going to go into their blockchain, smart contract, future, and all of this is
dumb.
And part of it is that they don't want to live in a world where they don't get to found the
country.
Why should these old dead guys in wigs get to be the ones who are the founders?
We are the founders, right?
That's the special magic word in Silicon Valley is to be the founder.
And if you read Biology Srinivasan, he says all of this just as much, right?
It's just, it's all there in a convoluted form.
So I do think there are some tensions.
The right wing, the magas are also very suspicious of AI, which is talking people into suicide
and doing all kinds of terrible things and threatening to replace everyone's jobs, which will cause
massive upheaval, which, by the way, is the whole point.
Like, that's the point of it.
It's to cause this massive upheaval.
And to take all the jobs and all the values.
you and give it up to the handful of billionaires and trillionaires, which will then deprive
the economy of any kind of money and lead to some kind of great collapse. I mean, in many
ways, I think, you know, these guys are trying to be fascist, but I think they're the most
avowed Marxists out there because they're trying to prove Marx right in every way. And I'm not a
Marxist. I'm just like, but they're starting to convince me. Let's just put it that way.
Like, hey, he said this and you guys are doing it. But they're hyperstitioning Marxist reality.
other thing I've noticed in dealing with the network state issue where they're trying to build these cities here in California, these tech cities, is that some of the loudest critics are MAGA Republicans. And part of that is because they think these are liberal billionaires and that these are 15-minute cities and have something to a climate change. And I don't want to disavow anybody of their rationale for opposing Silicon Valley as a recovering propagandist myself, if you're motivated by your own narrative there. But I've had some talks with these people. And I've said, well, you know,
I come from a democratic background.
We probably disagree on a lot.
But just so you know, these people are not Democrats, right?
And they're not Republicans.
They're their own thing.
They're closer to you than they are to me.
But they'll use anything they can.
They'll use Ruben Diego and Alyssa Slotkin and Gavin Newsom.
And they'll use Ted Cruz and Donald Trump and J.D. Vance.
Any way they can win, they'll do it.
And what we have to realize, and this is the metaphor I've been testing out,
is that this is not about red versus blue right now.
We'll get to that later.
We'll never be done without one, right?
This is about an alien invasion by a species of strange human being
that doesn't even want to be human anymore,
that doesn't even want to live on Earth anymore,
and that doesn't believe in God that thinks it's God.
And this is an existential threat to our country, to our future, to the planet,
and we have to fight against that.
And they don't quite agree with me, but they're thinking about it.
They understand what I'm saying.
They would normally despise me as a Democratic spokesman, someone who worked for Kamala Harris and Jerry Brown, but they see what I'm writing and that we're against a common enemy.
And so to go back to René Girard and Peter Thiel, we are in a crisis in our society.
We do need to solve it, and we do need to unite people in some way.
The way we unite those people may be unorthodox.
It may not make sense right now.
But I think the key is to unite the majority of people in the country and in the world against this alien species of billionaires.
They are the enemy.
That's really fascinating to hear, right?
And it brings to mind in a sense, you know, thinking about kind of the commonalities and finding that kind of common enemy or like common program that brings people together even if they have very different politics.
And it brings to a certain degree some of the things that Bernie Sanders used to do, right?
in the way that there would be people who would be conservatives, but the type of way that he was
talking about politics, he would get them to consider these more kind of liberal or progressive
ideas because he was speaking to them, and he was speaking about the issues that they felt
that mattered, right? And talking about how the tech industry and these Silicon Valley billionaires
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I'm happy that you started to redirect our conversation back to Peter Thiel, because that's where I wanted to take it as well, right?
And I wanted to ask you, when Peter Thiel talks about the Antichrist, how does he position the Antichrist?
You know, what is the Antichrist in his view?
Who is he trying to say is the Antichrist?
And then, based on something that you were saying earlier, as he's describing that, what does it sound like the Antichrist really is, if this is how we're supposed to understand this.
Well, start with the end of that. The Antichrist, I think, is whoever wins total world power. And he has this fantasy that somehow that's what the left wants, or what the left is doing, what the liberals are doing. And that, therefore, justifies what he's trying to do and what the rights are trying to do. It's politics as an existential crisis. One side has to win over the other. And the reason the Antichrist framework is so powerful is because it completely
dehumanizes your opponent. They're no longer a person with a different opinion, right? They are
evil incarnate, the servants of Satan, against all life, against God, against Christ, against all of it.
And therefore, nothing you do to them is out of bounds. They do not deserve mercy. They do not
deserve law. They do not deserve democracy. That's why it's such a dangerous trope to use.
And he tries to put the label on Greta Thunberg for being a climate activist, the idea that
all of us getting together to save our planet and stop burning fossil fuels is somehow going to lead to a totalitarian government.
He says that communist was the antichrist of the 20th century, communism, which I didn't know there were multiple antichrists in multiple centuries, right?
But again, it's not one person.
So for him, it's either one person or it's a movement.
It just shifts to be whoever his enemy is.
Tech regulation is another possible antichrist.
But he also defines, and this is the most interesting part of all, he defines the,
The Antichrist is someone who would rise to power by talking constantly about Apocalypse and Armageddon.
And as someone who would be highly interested in surveillance and total control.
And the person who most fits the bill in the entire world right now is Peter Thiel,
who is a co-founder of Palantir, which is wrapping its tentacles around every government in the world that it can get a hold of.
And Peter Thiel is traveling the world talking about the Antichrist, the Apocalypse, and Armageddon, nonstop.
Not only that, but he's created this wave in Silicon Valley, which I call Silicon Valley
Apocalypse Capitalism, where they're all starting to talk this way. Silicon Valley is obsessed
with apocalypse in the end time. So the thing about the Antichrist narrative, and this came from
the historian Robert Fuller, who wrote a book called Naming the Antichrist back in the 90s,
is that the people who accuse others of being the Antichrist are very often, it can be reversed.
They meet all the characteristics they're laying out. So in a way, the Antichrist is a
a mirror. It's a mirror image. And that's why I say it's really about who is on the outside
when the majority unites. And what Peter Thiel is saying is we have to find a way to engineer
so that our enemies, the climate activists, the liberals, the left are the scapegoat. Because
otherwise it's going to be us. And that's because he knows that's the most logical conclusion,
is that they are the ones to blame. And it doesn't have to be that way, by the way. I don't believe
we have to have an apocalypse. I believe we could save the planet. I believe we could solve our
problems democratically. I believe that people could have their needs met on a planet where
trillionaires are possible, being part of a species that can envision going to Mars and beyond, right?
We can solve the problems on this earth and start by helping the poor, helping the sick,
which, by the way, is what Jesus fucking said we should do. And they claim to be on the side of
Jesus, but they don't want to do that, right? They want to care.
kick off, go to, they're against the creation itself. So the Antichrist thing is a mirror,
and I really think that Teal, Peter, if you're listening, really need to deescalate from that
because, you know, 20 years ago I read a book called Pursuit of the Millennium by a Cambridge scholar
named Norman Cohn. It's all about the history of this eschatological apocalypse thinking
through European history. European history is full of movements that were into the world
movements and ended up in violent revolutions and pogroms and all kinds of things like that.
And some revolutions were worthwhile, but a lot of them were weird and bad.
This never ends well.
The apocalypse mentality is headed toward violence, always in every case.
And Norman Cohn saw the rise of the Nazis as the most recent example and manifestation
of that.
He wrote his book in the early 60s.
So this is some dangerous stuff to play with.
It's a dangerous thing to hyperstition.
And I think we need to use hyperstition, this power of imagining the future, to imagine a future where we don't have a bunch of billionaires threatening us with apocalypse.
And where we don't have any billionaires at all who have this power to completely take over our country and reshape our lives, what Silicon Valley is trying to do is basically acquire and liquidate our country.
And that should not be possible.
We have a hole in the Constitution that somehow allowed this to happen.
And, you know, I was always against people saying, well, we need to, in Citizens United,
I'm like, how the hell are we going to do that?
Washington's all locked up.
We need to think beyond what exists today.
We need to think what the future looks like when people realize who the enemy really is
and what they've tried to do to our country.
And so I'm becoming a lot more optimistic these days.
I'm a techno-optimist, too, just in a very different way.
I wanted to pick up on a few things that you said earlier and then maybe pick up
some of the later parts of what you were saying after that. But, you know, when you're talking about
kind of identifying the enemy, like we talked about earlier, obviously I see a lot of that in Mark
Andreessen, right? You know, they need to find the enemy to basically direct the anger of a lot of the
public in a different direction from themselves, as you're saying. And you can also understand them
why they're so determined to attack democracy as you have been talking about because they don't
want us to be able to use the levers of power against them, right? You know, they want to take
away the ability for us to really start to rein them in and to ensure that they don't have the
power that they do. But when you're talking about kind of really taking aim at the people who
say Peter Thiel would identify as the Antichrist, that also speaks to me. You know, you brought up
Blagis Srinivasan earlier some of the stuff that he has talked about, about, you know,
identifying the reds and the blues in kind of these.
different kind of cities of the future or whatever and really trying to like basically make
them non-humans right you know you can do anything to them you can exclude them you can kick them out
you need to identify them you know in the way that you know you can think in the past of how the
nazis were identifying the jews making them wear clear markers these sorts of things coming
up again and again and it's a really dangerous vision for what a future could be and how they really
do just try to find their enemies and say you know we are going to identify these people
clearly these people are not human these people can be attacked it doesn't matter what you
do to them but you know join our side and we can kind of take these people on together sort of a
thing yeah they know that much of history but i think there's a lot they're missing a they don't
realize how unappealing they are having worked in politics it's an unfair world but you got to
have charisma to lead people you got to have something that animates them that makes them want
to believe in you all they have is money and that's why they get all of these in-sale dorks and like
five girls to show up and clap and go to their conference or whatever. Those people are just
trying to get their stupid startups funded, you know, the moment there's not money there,
you know, having been in political power before, there's all these people who show up when
you're in a suit and you're important. And the minute you don't have it anymore, you have three
friends. You find out who your friends were, right? That's how it is with these guys, too.
They don't realize that they're actually not popular. They're just rich. It's the pork chop
around your neck, bro. It's not anything you're saying, anything you're doing. And you know,
And the thing is that people in Silicon Valley, these young people, they're not very smart,
maybe about computers or coding or something, but not about humanities, not about politics, certainly.
And that's something to me that's been interesting as someone who's an expert on politics,
who's done city hall, who's done campaigns, the capital, the state house, they're so damn green.
Like, I could have looked at California forever I did early on.
Like, that shit ain't passed in a vote in Solano County.
Everybody knew that.
Like, it's not like I had a magical power.
Anybody who knows politics knows that's not going to happen.
You're picking a huge fight.
Nobody knows who you are.
Your spokesman's from the Czech Republic, that you're CEO, right?
You at least got to get a local to pretend this was their homespun dream, man.
You don't know how to tell a story in politics?
Come on.
So there's some things they don't understand.
They don't want to say what all those things are, because I don't want them to get smart about it.
They have started to hire Democratic operatives here in California, and they're hiring up all of them.
Most of the people working for venture capitalists right now in their political ventures of California
are the advisors to Gavin Newsom, Kamala Harris.
People don't really talk about that because we have a political press that largely protects these people so that they give them little scoops now and then.
And, you know, there's like a don't bite, wolf does not bite wolf game being played.
But I'm working on that.
My book will have some information in it because my fear is that what these guys are going to do is buy off a Democratic Party as well.
And that just means they're on a slower boat to the tech fascist future.
If you think about it, they could give $10 million to everybody in Congress and make it all back in a crypto scam next week.
How much of Congress could they buy with that?
Probably a lot.
So I think we have to act before they get that kind of brazen power.
And with Trump getting rid of all shame in politics,
like, in 10 years, people might be like, yeah, I'm becoming a congressman
so I can just get rich and do what tech wants me to do.
And that's what biology says in his weird screeds, right?
Like we'll pay the police, we'll ally with the police,
and give them free food and give jobs to their family members.
He identifies bribery and he calls it merging the networks, right?
You've got to merge the network.
So that to me is the bigger danger, and I think it needs to be called out.
I think a lot of these folks, some of these consultants, I came up with them in politics.
I've known them for years.
They just want the big check.
They don't really think about what they're getting into.
Some of them have started to realize it because of my work.
Some of them text me links sometimes.
Like, did you see this thing?
Like, wait.
Oh, so you're paying attention now?
Are you still on the payroll?
But again, the venture capitalists, even the people who work on their political campaigns are just doing it for money.
That's a problem they have to confront.
Again, in their fantasy of the future where they rule everything, they're not factoring in the fact that their guards are going to murder them the first chance they get because historically, violence is what makes you king.
Why would you sit around guarding some trillionaire in his digital castle when you can just put a hole in his head and be the king?
Right? So they will come to appreciate the charms of liberal democracy too late, I fear.
And again, one thing you don't factor in is that the reason we have the system of government we have
through all of Greece and Rome and all of history is because we tried everything else.
Nothing has been tried more than tyranny and authoritarianism, you know.
While they were getting all hyped upon fascist philosophy during the pandemic,
I strangely fell into a rabbit hole of the French Revolution and read a lot of books about that fascinating stuff.
And they should do that as well, I would say.
get off the fascism for a minute. I'll read the fascism. You read the French Revolution,
and then let's catch up in in 2028. You and Peter Thiel can have a discussion then once you've
caught up on some different literature. Anytime, Peter. But when you're talking about the political
campaigns and the political spending, right, I feel like the crypto industry has really showed
how effective you can be at deploying that money in order to try to, in their case, kind of buy
policies that are favorable to them. But it feels like they have kind of set an example.
example, for then other folks in the tech industry to want to follow if they want to try to
pursue similar ends in kind of future campaigns, which is kind of concerning.
Well, there's some tension growing. I just saw a story today that they also have an AI pack
now. And apparently MAGA's upset about that. They're trying to claim too much power too
quickly. That's another rookie mistake they're making. If you read the art of war, change should
not be rapid and massive. It should be slow. Change, but never too much at once. Or otherwise,
you get revolt. They're getting revolt because they're moving too far.
fast. And they're just going for everything. And people have big concerns about AI. And so I think
they are in this narrow time frame of needing to bully everyone to get their way to get their lack of
regulation locked in. But I think they're meeting some resistance. And they're probably upset because
the Trump family's gotten like $5 billion in crypto wealth over the past 10 months. And hell, how much do you
need to give us everything we want? Well, you made a deal with the devil. And he's never going to give you
everything you want. He's terrified. He knows you want him gone. But the crypto thing is a real
problem. And I think a thing that needs to happen is we need to stigmatize crypto very strongly.
It must become unacceptable for Democrats to accept crypto money. If a Democrat is accepting
crypto money, they are buying into a dark, anti-American, anti-democratic vision of the future.
And if you don't believe me, we'll then ask them exactly what is crypto for, Senator,
exactly what is crypto for representative?
Can you explain to me why anybody needs this?
To hedge against the failure of the dollar?
Wasn't it your job to make sure the dollar doesn't fail?
I mean, this is insane that you even have to have this conversation,
but I think we need to start regarding anybody who is pro-crypto
or who accepts crypto money as deeply suspicious as on the other side.
And then you can take away.
And it has to be that even when they spend billions of dollars or millions of dollars
in campaigns,
works against them. We've seen that in California when billionaires try to buy office,
their spending turns everyone off and turns against them. When I worked in politics, I saw many
focus groups that show an immediate drop in support when it's a rich person trying to fund the
whole thing. So, you know, it's not something that's going to work 100% of the time, but we need
to make it clear that, you know, whoever takes the crypto is the antichrist.
Yeah, a good way to put it, given this conversation. But totally.
with you on the war on crypto and making that completely unacceptable, right?
You know, if you touch it, you're kind of persona non grata.
You've taken the mark of the beasts.
We'll just go, we'll go full teal here.
Another thing I wanted to ask you, you've brought up this concept of hyperstition several
times throughout the conversation.
I was wondering if you could flesh that out a little bit more for us.
Tell us what this actually is, where this concept comes from, and how you see it being
deployed by these folks in the tech industry to try to serve their ends.
Hypersition comes from Nick Land, who's like the father of accelerationism and also a big part of the Dark Enlightenment movement with Curtis Jarvin.
He had a lot of these ideas about leaving behind humanity, and a lot of them are very drug-addled and hard to read.
I spent way too much time this summer trying to read Nick Land and realized that I didn't have to go through every single piece of it.
I could get the gist, and there's some key parts of it.
So hyperstition is a portmanteau, a combined word of hype and superstition.
And the idea is that you can manifest reality through telling stories.
And you tell stories that spread and you repeat them until people believe them until they become real.
In a way, you know, in the 90s, there was a book called The Secret that even Oprah was pushing about if you just, here's how you manifest the life you want.
And even before that, in like the 40s or 30s, Norman Vincent Peel was it, wrote the power of
positive thinking, right? Through positive thinking, you can make things happen. And there's some
truth to that, being positive, going after being motivated. But they call it hyperstition. And what they
mean by that, the other word for that is basically propaganda. How do you tell a narrative? How do you
tell a story that shapes reality? And that's, there's a lot of words for that. Propaganda is one of
those words. You know, strategic communications is one of those words. Another word they like to use
is memetic warfare. And memetic warfare is a tactic or strategy of hyperstition.
And we largely see that happening today with a lot of things they're doing with the apocalypse, with AI, with, you know, they just try to have a story that people believe and that then generates money for them. Venture capital is pretty much based on hyperstition, imagining something and then making that thing happen. And Catherine Boyle, who started off with an internship that Peter Thiel got her at Founders Fund, who's now at Andreessen Horowitz pushing something she calls
American dynamism, which is sort of a pitch-deck version of white nationals and militarism,
literally fusing religion, the state, and capitalism.
I think Mussolini had a word for that one.
But she says, meme it and we will be it.
So that's what hyperstition is.
Let's create a meme, an idea, get everybody talking about it.
Oh, Silicon Valley is the agent of Christ, right?
or we don't need Earth anymore, we're going to live on Mars.
Or AI is God and don't worry there will be jobs.
By the way, when they talk about AI eliminating all the jobs, which is their big dream,
I'm not sure if that's true or not, but that's their stated result.
They talk about, well, we're all going to get paid by this somehow.
We're all going to have a profit.
Isn't that Silicon Valley socialism?
You know, again, I'm telling you, they're trying to prove Marx here.
Like, if I were running the Democratic Party,
would be explaining to all the people in Maga Land how they're going to put socialism on you
with the AI. And instead of having socialism with the AI, we should have health care and jobs
and nobody should ever be homeless, right? No socialism. Let's just have all of our needs met.
Let's just use a different term for it, you know? Well, yeah, they're trying to, what are they
talking about? Well, if you look at the sovereign individual, which is this book that inspired Peter Thiel's
thinking, AI was going to lead to the complete collapse of society and massive violence,
because of the lack of jobs, right? People don't have food, people don't have money, they're
going to steal, they're going to fight, they're going to kill. So then why do you have all
these billionaires so crying about crime and wanting cameras everywhere and wanting mass
incarceration if your entire state plan is to collapse the economy and create a violent
criminal future? A lot of internal contradictions in this particular capitalist vision that
seem to be destined to lead to its complete collapse at some point. But anyway, that's a conversation
for another day. Definitely, definitely. And I'm sure you'll be back on to talk about.
it. But when you talk about the notion of hyperstition, right, and hearing you describe it,
like, to me, it kind of echoes basically what the tech industry does. It kind of makes up this
story constantly that this new technology or this new product or whatever it's going to be
is the next big thing that's going to transform our lives in so many different ways. It's going to be
incredible. It's going to create so much wealth and prosperity and what have you. And then, you know,
we see all the valuations of the companies and stuff that are working on that particular product
explode for a while and then give it two or three years and all of the claims that they supposedly
made don't seem to come to fruition and things come back down to earth just in time for them to
come up with a new thing that is going to change the world in so many different ways you know like
it feels like it's very much part of the way that they work but now instead of just using it
to try to, you know, kind of hype up a particular product and try to make money off of
the market and shape share values and company values and things like that, it seems like
it's now weaponizing it much more to try to affect the way that we see the future, the political
system, to try to affect, you know, a kind of a much broader swath of reality than what
they tried to seize and to control in the past.
Oh, definitely. They've run out of unicorns. So they need a new mystical creature to
hunt. And that creature is Godlike AI or the Antichrist or getting rid of the United States and having
network states or getting rid of the Earth and going to Mars. It's in-stage venture capital. They're having
an existential crisis. And they want to impose that on the rest of us because they feel like that's
where the trillion-dollar opportunities are. How do we liquidate all of the work and the blood and the
sweat and the tears that went to this country and make sure a handful of men get rich and powerful
off of it, right? Venture capital is all about exit. How do you leave a company at a point where
everyone sees its peak value, take yours, and get on to the next thing? They're trying to exit
democracy. They're trying to exit Earth. They're trying to exit mortality. No, they're not trying
to. They're literally exiting reality. And it's time to put a stop to that.
We have to be like, yeah, no.
If we can give Elon Musk a trillion dollars, we can have daycare and health care and all these other things.
And so while they have shown the power of hyperstition, it's a technology that's also available to us.
We can dream too.
We can also imagine a future.
And I think we need to do more of that.
I think lately in the States, anyway, there's been a lot of fear.
Oh, it's a fascist country now.
It's not a democracy.
Like, shut up.
please go hide your face in your pillow and scream all your fear there.
We need to be brave, we need to be strong, and we need to make it clear that the future
is not going to belong to these handful of people in any circumstances,
even if not all of us are there in that future, you know, we have to be that brave because
this is an existential crisis.
It's one being forced on us by Silicon Valley.
Even hearing you say that, like, we'll see how he actually is able to govern, you know,
as mayor of New York City, but it felt like Zora Mamdani kind of used what you're talking about
kind of building a reality, making people see the world in a different way, different possibilities
and what you can actually do with power. It seemed like he was really effective in doing that
in a way that we don't typically see of kind of more liberal and progressive politicians in
the United States. Well, people are pushed off of that. You have to only live in a narrow
confines a reality of what's possible by appealing to a centrist platform and if the votes exist
for it right now. And look, a few years ago, I would have completely told you the same thing
because I come from hard school, real city hall and legislative politics. I know how it works.
Yeah, the left always wants some crazy shit. They don't got the votes. Whatever, right?
Give them something good enough and drag two or three of their votes onto it and win. But I think we
need to change our mentality. And I'd say one thing that inspires me, because you should always find
inspiration from your enemies. I think Sun Tzu said that, too, is that they are showing us what's
possible. Donald Trump is showing us what's possible. Anything's possible. The president can send
the troops into cities. The president can make $5 billion off a crypto in plain sight. The president
can tear down an entire section of the White House and build an Epstein ballroom. You know, Elon Musk can
give a Hitler salute at the inauguration and get a trillion dollars. Peter Thiel, the most likely candidate
for Antichrist can go around the world calling everyone else the Antichrist. We can do that too,
and we can do that for good, not for evil. You know, in all the stories in the Bible and Lord of the Rings
and science fiction, there's a good side and there's a bad side of the same energy. So let's understand
the power, the force of hyperstition, and let's start putting it to use sooner rather than later.
And I think the more that people do that and understand it, the better it will be because anything is possible now.
And if we don't wake up and start acting, then they will be the only ones on the field.
And that's where they are right now.
But it's falling apart.
You know, Curtis Jarvin is panicked and wants to flee the country.
You know, Steve Bannon last week said, we're all going to go to prison if the Democrats win the midterms, which says there's going to be midterms, right?
And if there's midterms, we're going to win them.
So they are scared.
They're way out there.
I would much rather be in our shoes than theirs.
Because believe me, there's a lot of things I would do, but overthrow the government of the United States of America in plain sight, not advisable, high penalty for this particular crime.
So I think we have to be hopeful, we have to be active, we have to be motivated, and we have to be optimistic about what the future is going to bring to Silicon Valley.
Absolutely.
I used to joke earlier, what was it, earlier in this tenure of Trump, they were talking about reopening Alcatraz.
And I said, yeah, let's reopen Alcatraz and let's stick all the tech billionaires in it.
Yeah.
Listen, as we start to wrap up this conversation, I'm wondering, obviously we've talked about
these lectures that Peter Thiel did, all of his kind of rambling about the Antichrist.
What have you made of the response to it?
Have you been hopeful seeing how people generally have responded to kind of just the crazy
things that he is saying?
When you get roasted on South Park and Joe Rogan, you're done.
This was a real flop on Teal's part.
And I don't know who's advising him, but he needs to like, five.
them, get a new therapist. I don't know what. The fact that it went this far, actually,
Tim Dillon said this on the Joe Rogan podcast. There's nobody around him who said, no four
lectures on the Antichrist, maybe no lectures on the Antichrist. I think it woke some people up to
what the hell is going on with this guy. I was actually in a public place recently, and I heard
someone explaining Peter Thiel Antichrist in the J.D. of Ants connection to someone on the phone.
And I was like, my heart was so warm, like, he has really broken through with this.
And I think it's a warning sign for people of how crazy it's getting.
You know, this is a guy who's behind Trump, who has a $10 billion contract with the U.S. Army to consolidate all of its contracts, whose company is busy plugging into data all over the world from governments.
There's a federal database being creative information on every American.
and this is what he's doing. If I were him, I'd be quiet. People wouldn't know my name. That's another way to do things. So I'm glad in a way that he's doing what he's doing. He's advertising the crisis and raising awareness of the problem. So the problem being him. So, yeah, I think it was a massive mistake. It's nothing you would ever advise anybody to do. But again, these guys think they're so smart and they're not. My mom used to tell me when I was a kid, you know, you're so smart, you're stupid. Because they were thinking
that I really was good at and things I was really, really bad at. And that was the way she put it.
And it reminds me of these guys now. What madness would possess you to go around talking about
the goddamn Antichrist right now in the middle of all of this? Not the time, but in a way,
the perfect time. Because people need to understand this is where we are, yo. Peter Thiel
Antichrist's lecture series. That's the point in history we've reached. I think maybe my final
question would be, you know, when we think about Peter Thiel, right, I feel like we often
had this narrative of him that he was often kind of operating behind the scenes, you know,
he had his levers on the power, but you couldn't often see it. He was this kind of mastermind
in how he was pulling the levers and the strings and all these sorts of things. You know,
he was obviously someone who got behind Trump early back in the 2016 campaign, you know,
kind of put his head out there and made it easier, I guess, for a lot more of these techniques
people to justify getting behind him in the years that came later. And I wonder, you know,
seeing how he has progressed over the past number of years, do you think he still has that
influence behind the scenes that he used to have? You know, you mentioned someone like Catherine
Boyle who had this relationship to him, you know, he has a number of kind of acolytes out there,
it seems. Or do you feel like it's kind of reaching the point where he might have had this
influence in the past maybe that was even exaggerated to a certain degree but do you feel like that
that is waning do you feel like his influence is harder to see or does it feel like he is just kind
of increasingly kind of losing it and we're all just kind of watching his spiral i think he's at the
height of his power a lot of what's happening now came from his brain he's been thinking about this
for a long time but i think he's blowing it you know i don't think he had it all figured out and
the fact that he's out there talking about the antichrist shows the degree to which this is
not motivated by logical strategy. It's motivated by something more akin to religion, to religious
delusion in particular. And we see that in a lot of Silicon Valley, a religious delusion. Some of
them, I'm not sure about teal. Some of them definitely doing drugs. I mean, a lot of the Yarvin stuff
comes out of LSD abuse. He tells the story himself, if you look carefully enough at his podcasts
and stuff, he wants you to know that that was a big inspiration for him. And the problem is,
when you're just telling these little fantasies and fairy tales and you're disregarding history
and the experience of other people who are more directly involved in matters like politics,
there's a lot you don't understand. Like the fact that just firing a bunch of people from the
government willy-nilly will lead to problems that force you to hire a lot of those people back,
right? I have a lot of criticism for the people in charge of things, but there's a lot of
expertise in government that if you don't have it and you just take something out, there's a reason
that thing goes created over time.
And it's not a perfect system.
There's never a perfect system.
I don't believe in perfect systems.
But these people, the tech people do,
and that's a big flaw that they have, right?
You're never going to have a world without crime.
You're never going to have a world where there's no addiction or dysfunction, right?
But you create systems that avoid those, create systems that don't create more crime,
like not having poverty, right?
They'll have less people hungry, stealing, needing to do crime.
but they want to create perfect systems through control and coercion and surveillance and through
getting rid of government.
But that was just a massive fail, right?
You can't just do that.
So they don't have it all figured out.
And I don't think they have a plan for what happens when everybody is really, really angry at what the billionaires tried to do to us.
Yeah, it definitely seems that way.
And hopefully we're getting closer to the reckoning where they really need to feel the consequences of what they have done.
Gil, it's always great to get your insights into all this.
I'm really looking forward to the book, you know, once it's ready and out there,
because I'm sure there's going to be some fantastic stuff in there.
I really appreciate you taking the time to come back on the show.
Thanks so much.
Yeah, and you've got to come on my podcast, too.
Happy to do it.
Happy to do it.
Gil Duran writes the Nerd Reich newsletter and is working on his first book,
which shares the same title.
Tech Won't Save Us has made in partnership with The Nation magazine
and is hosted by me, Paris Marks.
Production is by Kyla Husser.
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