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The CEO of one of Trump’s favorite companies just made some telling remarks

The head of Peter Thiel’s Palantir Technologies outlined a dystopian vision of the future.


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Opinion

The CEO of one of Trump’s favorite companies just made some telling remarks
The head of Peter Thiel’s Palantir Technologies outlined a dystopian vision of the future.

Jan. 22, 2026, 3:41 PM EST
By Ryan Teague Beckwith/MSNow

A few decades ago, CEOs were almost intentionally boring, steady hands in gray flannel suits who projected stability.

But starting with the tech boom of the 1990s, they became more eccentric, often self-consciously so. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg wore gray hoodies to business meetings while Twitter founder Jack Dorsey meditated in a cave in Myanmar and SpaceX’s Elon Musk mused about nuking the Martian ice caps.

So it’s tempting to dismiss the wild-eyed remarks of a corporate leader at the World Economic Forum as just another episode of “CEOs Say the Darnedest Things.”

But it’s worth paying attention to what Palantir Technologies CEO Alex Karp said at Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday because it explains a lot about the underlying ideology that appears to be motivating some of the Trump administration’s actions during the past year.

Palantir is no ordinary company. It does billions of dollars’ worth of work for the federal government, especially the Defense, Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security departments, providing software that tracks data on everything from the spread of Ebola to tax evasion to immigration.

It was also founded by Peter Thiel, a billionaire who was a prominent early supporter of Trump’s and spoke at the 2016 Republican convention, and played a key role in the rise of Vice President JD Vance. The New York Times reports that several associates at Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency effort previously worked at Palantir and other companies funded by Thiel.

In a conversation with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, Palantir CEO Alex Karp said a few eyebrow-raising things about the future of society under artificial intelligence:

No one really needs to go to college any more. “We’re building batteries for a battery company, and the people who are doing it in America are doing roughly the same job that Japanese engineers are doing, and they went to high school,” he said.

AI will mean there will be enough jobs for everyone to work in their own country, so there will be no need to emigrate. “I do think these trends really do make it hard to imagine why we should have large-scale immigration unless you have a very specialized skill,” he said.

AI will solve racism. Arguing that it “bolsters civil liberties,” Karp suggested a hypothetical scenario in which an AI could be used to see if patients at a hospital were treated differently based on their income or another part of their personal background.

Some of this is to be expected, especially at Davos. AI is to tech CEOs what tariffs are to Trump: a magical tool that will somehow solve every problem and lead to a glorious future, if only everyone else believes hard enough.

But there’s an underlying ideology here that’s worth unpacking. Despite having a degree in philosophy and a Ph.D. in neoclassical social theory from a top German university, Karp doesn’t really see the value in a classic liberal arts education. He argued at Davos that AI “will destroy humanities jobs,” which he talks about as though it were a selling point and not an unfortunate side effect.

The future all of this suggests is one in which high school students train for factory jobs, no one goes to college or immigrates to the U.S. and we all trust black-box software run by major government contractors to determine whether society is being run properly.

Coincidentally or not, this also happens to be the most likely end result of several Trump administration policies.

Trump has attempted to shut down the Department of Education, end student loan forgiveness programs and heavily tax the endowments of private universities, all of which would make it harder for the average high school student to go to college. He’s also instituted travel bans, raised immigration fees, suspended refugee programs and targeted 12 million undocumented immigrants for deportation, reportedly using Palantir software to do so.

To be fair, Trump and Karp arrived at these ideas from different places.

For Trump, ending immigration and somehow bringing back mid-century factory jobs are an attempt to return America to some mythic golden age, while for Karp it’s more about creating a glorious technocratic future. But the overlap here is significant, and helps explain why a lot of Silicon Valley CEOs who otherwise don’t have a lot in common with Trump still support him.

The president doesn’t have much of an ideology, so it’s tempting for his critics to assume that Trumpism, such as it is, will fade away when he leaves office. But remarks like the ones Karp made at Davos show that there are a lot of powerful people out there with ideologies that can lead to a very similar place.

Trumpism may be defeated one day, but Karpism will live on.


Ryan Teague Beckwith is a newsletter editor for MS NOW.
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dancingtongue · 80-89, M
No one really needs to go to college any more. “We’re building batteries for a battery company, and the people who are doing it in America are doing roughly the same job that Japanese engineers are doing, and they went to high school,” he said.

Could that be because Japan, and most Asian countries, value education and so their high schools are more like college in the U.S.? Or to put it in proper perspective, we have let our high schools deteriorate so much even before Trump's attacks on the educational system, that our high schools are more like elementary schools these days?

I'm so glad I lived in an era when the U.S. invested in quality, free, public education systems up through public universities which helped me rise out of poverty.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@dancingtongue Small point of order. The Japanese and other Asian nations hve upgraded their education, But culturally also instilled the need to strive and compete. Where American schools continue to dumb down and the culture has for a generation instilled the idea that simply being America was enough for success..Of course there are achievers and overachievers.. But not enough for a solid middle class..😷
SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
Karpist thoughts may live on. It's up to government to regulate AI so it works in the interests of civil society. And never again to become as enslaved to to the corporate world as Trump has.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@SunshineGirl I must admit I'd not thought of it that way, so much as these dark desires being relatively rare among fetishes. I agree with the deterrence factor though. Though it's not only paedophilia that publishers like Elon Musk do not try enough to wipe out.

It's also cruel peer-to-peer bullying, suicide and self-injury encouragement, false and harmful medical claims and fads, anonymous attempts to crush constructive discussion of difficult social matters or political-party differences.

It's also these publishers' deliberate policy to make their sites addictive, and to influence users' selections of contents to minimise seeing alternatives.

Their claim not to be publishers is hardly credible.

One point though that seems not mentioned enough, about worrying about children withering their lives away on-line, is, well, who are these children's exemplars, but so many of the grown-ups around them? Even their own parents. So many grown-ups seem they really really must spend the whole bus or train journey, cafe meal, walk along the High Street, shopping, even in social circles,... going tap-tap-tap-scroll-scroll-scroll on their little talking blocks. Even the professional wafflers on radio, TV, in the papers, love to tell us "now we all"... do just that. So we can't blame the children completely.
SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
@ArishMell I don't blame children at all. They pick up bad habits from the older generation. Most children desire nothing more than quality time from an attentive adult.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@SunshineGirl I agree - a sort of unwitting neglect, even. Being given mere cartoons to watch on a 'phone is hardly "quality" of time, attention or indeed material.
Everyone here shares the same vision of the future! None.
You're doomed! Nothing anyone can do, it's only going to get worse!
There are ONLY two parties! No alternatives! Sing it together! No alternatives!
@whowasthatmaskedman that's been the way things have been. The USA wants nothing to do with a different future and still remains ready to nuke us out of existence to make sure.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@Roundandroundwego The "USA" is not a monolith. A lot of people disagree with the government. They just expect the system to right itself. In that i think they are wrong..😷
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@whowasthatmaskedman Internally, No.. But externally, America has ONE President. One Commander in chief. And that one voice is heard as the One Leader..So the rest of the world is entitled to see all America through that one lens..No one heard California speak up when Trump announced Tariffs and say that anything shipped to California didnt attract a tariff.😷
Northwest · M
JD Vance, Thiel's Manchurian candidate is going to insure Thiel's dystopian vision through Palantir's control of military and government systems command and control systems.
Peter Thiel is somehow unironically doing his best to be a Bond villain to the point of being cartoonish.

Like the guy is seriously dangerous but at the same time he makes it so hard to take him seriously because he is such a walking villain trope.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
And make no mistake. It is the Karps who are funding Stephen Miller and his people, who are using Trump as a glove puppet.. (There is an image you will want to unsee.)😷

 
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