Palantir posts mini-manifesto denouncing inclusivity and ‘regressive’ cultures
The company said the 22-point summary explains its work as scrutiny grows over its ties to U.S. immigration and defense agencies.
- Palantir posted a 22-point summary of CEO Alexander Karp's book, 'The Technological Republic' addressing societal and technological themes.
- The post criticizes what it calls 'the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism' and questions blind devotion to pluralism and inclusivity.
- Palantir states that the key issue with A.I. weapons is who builds them and for what purpose.
- The company argues Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that enabled its rise and notes Western resistance to defining national cultures in the name of inclusivity.
54 Articles
54 Articles
The AI-based analysis company publishes its 22-point manifesto on X: "The engineering elite of Silicon Valley must participate in the defense of the nation"
The Karp doctrine in 22 points. Silicon Valley helps the Pentagon (ANSA)
The controversial US technology company has posted 22 theses, some of which go far beyond the usual topics for companies. Critics read in it a plea for techno-fascism. We answer the most important questions.
Distributed on X, this text summarizes the thinking of Palantir's CEO, Alexander Karp. His vision of technology serving American domination raises questions, while DGSI (among others) uses their tool.
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- 56% of the sources lean Left
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