efitz
I don’t know who TF this is but he is not a significant figure on the US political right.
The only places I can find on the web that connect Andreessen or Thiel to Yarvin are mid- to far-left web sites.
I am not claiming that the guy is or isn’t a kook- the article certainly makes him sound like one but I have 0 familiarity or corroborating sources that don’t share a political motivation for demonizing the guy.
I am also not making any assertion about past or present affiliation or shared political values between Thiel or Andreesen, and Yarvin. Again, I have no independent information.
So overall I just don’t care and don’t see that this establishes any sort of pattern or is anything other than a hit piece.
It doesn’t belong here on HN IMO.
shmerl
His fans must adhere to "Ignorance is Strength".
rootusrootus
I once tried to read some of his writing and I did find that it felt a bit like trying to read Ayn Rand.
mieses
Wow, Yarvin must be a serious threat if HN readers are posting "lawliberty.org" articles by a writer who's problem with Yarvin is that he "omits any reference to a loving God Who governs the world through His Providence".
How is the CEO chosen? I assume it’s likely via board members, who may get input from shareholders. In practice, it will distill into a democratic process, so is that the intent?
Overall, this sounds similar to how the Roman senate chose its emperors, which didn’t work out quite that well, which is why people leaned into democracy.
But besides that, and maybe I need to read the book, but this doesn’t seem to answer why the governed should agree to any social contracts and be governed in this manner.
There needs to be a discussion about liberal ideology and all it encompasses, including the left sides of the spectrum which can get quite grating on some discourse. But I am unconvinced that any enlightenment the world needs next needs to be flavored darkly.