In 2016, some said comparisons between the rises of Trump and Hitler were
misguided. But as tech’s titans donate millions, worrying new parallels emerge
In How Democracy Ends, his elegant book published after Trump’s election in
2016, David Runciman made a startling point. It was that while the liberal
democracy that we take for granted won’t last for ever, it will not fail in ways
familiar from the past: no revolutions, no military coups, no breakdowns of
social order. It will fail forwards in an unexpected manner. The implication was
that people making comparisons to what happened in 1930s Germany were misguided.
Until a few weeks ago, that seemed like sound advice. But then something
changed. Significant sectors of Silicon Valley – which for decades had been a
Democrat stronghold – started coming out for Trump. In 2016, Peter Thiel, the
contrarian billionaire and co-founder of PayPal, had been the only prominent
Valley figure to support Trump, which merely confirmed the fact that he was the
region’s statutory maverick. But in the past few weeks, quite a few of the
Valley’s big hitters (Elon Musk, Marc Andreessen and David Sacks, to name just
three) have revealed themselves to be supporters of – and donors to – Trump.
Musk has set up and donated to a Republican-aligned political action committee
(or Super Pac). On 6 June, the venture capitalist Sacks hosted a
$300,000-a-plate fundraising dinner for Trump at his San Francisco mansion. And
so on.
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Tag - Peter Thiel
Yale Law School graduate found allies in tech billionaires including Peter Thiel
who rallied privately for him
When JD Vance was a student at Yale Law School in 2011, he attended a talk
featuring Peter Thiel, the conservative tech billionaire. Although Vance didn’t
know Thiel at the time, over the next decade he would become Thiel’s employee,
friend and the recipient of his largesse. Thiel’s millions paved the way for
Vance to become a senator.
Thiel’s talk was “the most significant moment of my time at Yale Law School”,
Vance would write in a 2020 essay for The Lamp, a Catholic magazine. In Vance’s
telling, Thiel’s talk of the failures of elite institutions and belief in
Christianity made him reconsider his own faith and immediately make plans for a
career outside of law – one that wound through the worlds of tech and venture
capital before politics.
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