Wednesday, February 12, 2025

The New Techno-Nationalism: Power, Ideology, and the Eclipse of Ethics

 

The New Techno-Nationalism: Power, Ideology, and the Eclipse of Ethics  

I. Introduction: A New Power Alignment

On January 20, 2025, Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States, marking his controversial return to the White House. The ceremony, held inside the US Capitol rotunda, became a showcase of America's new power brokers. In the front row, a who's who of Silicon Valley sat shoulder to shoulder: Elon Musk, fresh from pumping over $275 million into Trump's victory[3] and poised to assume an unprecedented role in the administration; Mark Zuckerberg, who had just gutted Meta's fact-checking system at Trump's behest[2]; Jeff Bezos, and other tech titans, their combined net worth exceeding an astonishing $1 trillion.[1]

 The irony of this scene was palpable. Trump, who has long positioned himself as a populist champion of the "forgotten" rural Americans struggling with stagnant wages and rising living costs, surrounded himself with the ultra-elite oligarchs of the tech world. Yet this alliance was no mere marriage of convenience – it represented a deeper convergence between Silicon Valley's gospel of technological progress and nationalist politics, where self-appointed prophets of innovation found common cause with MAGA's vision of American renewal. The stark contrast between Trump's rhetoric of being the voice of the common people and the reality of his billionaire-studded inauguration highlights the bizarre nature of his populist claims – claims that somehow survived even as Musk doled out million-dollar daily "prizes" to voters in swing states through his PAC, a brazen scheme that distributed $17 million by election day.[4]

This gathering of tech moguls at the inauguration reflects a broader shift in our cultural values and the figures we choose to lionize. Nothing illustrates this transformation more clearly than examining who our leading biographers deem worthy of chronicling. When Walter Isaacson, perhaps America's preeminent biographer, looks to history, he finds subjects of profound humanistic impact: Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein – figures who not only innovated but wrestled deeply with the moral implications of their work, contributing to human understanding far beyond their specific fields.[5]

Yet when Isaacson surveys our present era for subjects of similar stature, he finds science and tech titans and venture capitalists: Elon Musk, Steve Jobs, Jennifer Doudna. These figures are celebrated not merely as innovators but as champions of American technological supremacy in an era of intensifying competition with China. This absence of contemporary figures whose impact transcends biotech, AI, and market disruption speaks volumes about our cultural priorities. That his collection marketed as the "genius biographies" places Jobs alongside Einstein, Franklin, and da Vinci reveals how thoroughly we've narrowed our vision of meaningful achievement. Where are today's philosophers? Poets? Composers and artists? Our culture seems to have lost interest in contributions that don't translate directly to big Tech and market capitalization.

II. The Origins of Techno-Futurism

The ideology that enables tech leaders to position themselves as humanity's rightful shepherds emerges from a peculiar fusion of science fiction and technical capability. This marriage of imagination and engineering has deep roots in humanity's eternal quest for transcendence. The term "transhumanism" first appeared in translations of Dante's Paradiso, describing the soul's journey toward divine life beyond mortal constraints.[6] When biologist Julian Huxley appropriated the term in 1957, he secularized this religious impulse, recasting transcendence as a scientific project.[7]

This secularization reached its apotheosis in Ray Kurzweil's vision of the "Singularity"—a predicted moment in 2045 when humans will achieve "digital immortality" by uploading their consciousness to computers.[8] As director of engineering at Google, Kurzweil transformed ancient dreams of eternal life into concrete research and development priorities. His prediction that "the human species, along with the computational technology it created, will be able to solve age-old problems ... and will be in a position to change the nature of mortality" exemplifies how religious promises of salvation get reframed as technological inevitabilities.[ibid.]

Today's tech leaders each offer their own variations on this technological salvation narrative. Elon Musk frames his Mars colonization project through Asimov's Foundation series, positioning himself as humanity's savior from a dying Earth. Mark Zuckerberg's Metaverse, inspired by Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, promises digital transcendence through virtual worlds, seemingly blind to that novel's dystopian warnings. Jeff Bezos draws directly from Star Trek and physicist Gerard O'Neill's space colony designs, envisioning millions living in cylindrical tubes among the stars.[9]
 
This fusion of scientific capability and science fiction imagination becomes institutionalized in elite technical education. At MIT's Media Lab, known as the 'Future Factory,' where Dr. Joy Buolamwini studied, students engage in courses that bridge speculative fiction and engineering practice. In one particular course, Science Fabrication, students were assigned science fiction novels and stories, and then challenged to imagine something futuristic to build—no matter how unrealistic it might initially seem—and attempt to create it within just six weeks.[10] Whether or not these inventions fully materialized, the nature of these assignments reveals a pedagogical commitment to balancing utopian imagination with engineering constraints. This approach treats AI as a fertile blend of futuristic imagination and contemporary technical knowledge, fostering a mindset where fictional possibilities shape technological development.

The result is a powerful ideology that can accommodate both utopian and catastrophic visions. Ray Kurzweil promises technological immortality while British philosopher Nick Bostrom warns of existential risks from artificial intelligence—yet both narratives serve to justify concentrated power and resources in the hands of tech leaders. As Buolamwini observes, investment in AI safety research is dramatically higher when framed in terms of existential risks than when addressing immediate harms like algorithmic bias or systemic discrimination.[11] Recent funding patterns support this observation: while organizations focused on existential AI risks receive multi-million dollar grants, initiatives addressing immediate concerns like algorithmic bias and discrimination typically receive far more modest support—often in the range of hundreds of thousands rather than millions of dollars.[12]

Meanwhile, immediate problems multiply. Beyond familiar concerns about job displacement, privacy violations, and algorithmic bias, new evidence reveals how AI's physical infrastructure strains power grids and depletes water resources.[13] The "apprentice gap" Buolamwini identifies—the elimination of entry-level positions through which expertise traditionally developed—threatens to create "the age of the last experts."[ibid.] Yet these concrete issues receive far less attention and funding than speculative future scenarios.

This techno-futurist ideology gains additional force by filling the void left by declining traditional religion. As tech leaders position themselves as prophets of a technological salvation, resistance to oversight becomes recast as heroic defiance of small-minded bureaucracy. The result is an ideology that simultaneously promises transcendence while demanding autonomy from democratic accountability—a powerful combination that would soon find expression in competing national projects.

III. Western Technological Theodicy

This techno-futurist framework meshes seamlessly with what effectively constitutes a technological theodicy—a system for justifying present suffering by appeal to future salvation. The pattern is familiar: just as Leibniz once offered a rational theodicy arguing that, due to God's ordering of the Universe, we live in "the best of all possible worlds,"[14] and Voltaire's satirical novella Candide mocked this rationalistic optimism through Dr. Pangloss's comical insistence that all suffering serves some greater good,[15] today's tech leaders offer their own, darker theodicy. While Pangloss merely glossed over suffering with jovial rationalization, tech leaders actively justify the negative consequences of their innovations—massive labor displacement, fragmenting of social cohesion, addiction-optimized platforms degrading mental health—as necessary sacrifices for their vision of technological transcendence.

The degraded character of this contemporary theodicy is illuminated by Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. In the play, the ironically named Lucky—a slave to the wealthy Pozzo—delivers a rambling monologue that preserves the form of traditional theodicy while descending into nihilistic incoherence. His litany of modern comforts ("penicillin, flying, gliding, floating, tennis games, golf") mixed with assertions about a God who "loves us dearly with some exceptions for reasons unknown" while some are "plunged in torment plunged in fire" offers a prescient parallel to today's techno-optimist rhetoric.[16]

This parallel becomes especially striking when we examine how tech leaders and their followers discuss innovation. "There is no material problem—whether created by nature or by technology—that cannot be solved with more technology," declares Marc Andreessen in his "Techno-Optimist Manifesto,"[17] expressing what amounts to a contemporary version of Pangloss's optimism, but with none of its innocence and all of its blindness to human cost. Like Lucky celebrating the modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition of servitude, tech enthusiasts catalog endless innovations while accepting their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.
A hollowed-out version of Emersonian ideals of individual authenticity and self-reliance, reduced to the throwing off of all constraints and naked assertion of power, now legitimates both tech leaders' rejection of oversight and political strongmen who break democratic norms in the name of authentic leadership. The strongman validates the tech leaders' claims to prophetic vision and innovative genius—as when Trump celebrated Musk as a 'super genius' and 'new star' in his victory speech[24]—while they in turn provide both technological capability and cultural capital to legitimate his authority. This symbiosis has evolved into an unprecedented integration of tech power into governance: from Musk's secret communications with Putin about geopolitical matters[25], to his presence during crucial diplomatic calls[26], to his leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) with its sweeping access to sensitive government systems[27]. This fusion of tech and state power reached new heights when Musk, acting as both presidential advisor and DOGE director, announced plans to shut down USAID—with his team forcing access to secure systems and threatening federal officials who resisted, even as legal experts questioned the constitutional authority for such actions[28].

IV. Chinese Technological Theodicy

Where Western technological theodicy has degraded into nihilistic celebration of unconstrained innovation and raw power, Chinese theodicy presents a fundamentally different vision—one that transforms present suffering into meaningful sacrifice through a positive moral framework. Rather than explaining away hardships through appeals to market innovation or mysterious technological destiny, it provides clear state-sanctioned moral principles for understanding how individual sacrifice serves the collective good.

This theodicy gains force by combining traditional Confucian values with modern state technological ambitions, framed through official party doctrine and state-guided sci-fi stories and blockbuster movies that have taken off in China. The virtue of ren (仁)—humaneness or benevolence toward others—provides a moral foundation for self-sacrifice.[16] The 21st century revival of Confucianism, encouraged by Xi, is brought into alignment with official moral and political precepts and doctrines of the State.[17,18] These are then propagated through increasingly popular and nationalistic science fiction such as the blockbuster movie series The Wandering Earth (2019) and The Wandering Earth II: The Prequel (2023).[19,20]
 
In particular, Xi's signature slogan and ideology, the "Chinese Dream," emphasizes China's rise to "fully developed" superpower status by 2049—a date that will mark one century since the founding of the PRC.[21] By then, according to official doctrine, China will be at the forefront of technology, with a united and prosperous citizenry and a state functioning for the good of not only all citizens, but all nations and humanity writ large.
 
The latter altruistic face of rising China brings us to another key doctrine in current official Chinese thought, viz. that of "Human Community with a Shared Future"—first articulated by Hu Jintao and refined by Xi in recent years. It has been incorporated into the constitution twice—first under Jintao in 2012, and again by Xi in 2018. This doctrine and its core principles provide an underlying leitmotif in the stories and movies under discussion. In 2018, it was added to the Constitution of the People's Republic of China as a core value of international relations. It was articulated negatively and positively. Negatively, China claims to be opposed to imperialism, hegemonism, and colonialism (the US and collective West are implicated in those). Positively, it is committed to unity and harmony among all the peoples of the world. As The China Media Project points out in an article on the doctrine: "The phrase 'community of common destiny for mankind'... incorporates traditional elements of Chinese foreign policy that prioritize a [Chinese] state-centered approach to human rights, while subordinating individual rights to the basic question of national interest.[emph. added]"[22]

In "The Wandering Earth," this idealistic doctrine manifests powerfully when the hero Liu Peiqiang, after seventeen years away from his family on a space station mission, must choose between reuniting with them or sacrificing himself to save humanity.[19] His final apology to his son for breaking his promise to return, before undertaking the suicide mission that will save Earth, exemplifies how personal loss becomes meaningful through service to collective purpose.

Unlike the market-driven development of science fiction in the West, China's state actively shapes the genre's themes and purposes. As Neil Gaiman recounts, after Chinese officials learned that American tech innovators were often inspired by childhood exposure to sci-fi, the state implemented strategic support and oversight of the genre. A state official explained to Gaiman: "The Chinese were brilliant at making things if other people brought them the plans. But they did not innovate and they did not invent. They did not imagine."[19]

V. Competing Theodicies, Common Functions

These distinct theodicies reflect deep cultural and political differences while serving similarly powerful legitimating functions. Where Chinese theodicy provides a collective moral framework through state guidance, Western theodicy draws power from deeply rooted American ideals of individual authenticity and achievement. Tech leaders cast themselves as Emersonian heroes who have moved beyond mere resistance to oversight to actively seeking and wielding political power, all while claiming to serve innovation. Though this framework shows signs of degradation into nihilistic celebration of power, it maintains cultural resonance through its appeal to American dreams of individual achievement and expressive individualism.

The fusion of tech and political theodicies in the West creates new pathways for concentrated power. When tech leaders and political strongmen mutually reinforce each other's authority—as exemplified by Musk's unprecedented appointment as a 'special government employee' with direct involvement in federal operations[28]—they transform challenges to their authority into opposition to authentic leadership and innovation itself. Understanding these legitimating mechanisms and their evolving manifestations becomes crucial as the boundaries between tech power and state authority grow increasingly fluid.

VI. Conclusion

The scene that opened our analysis—tech billionaires gathered at Trump's 2025 inauguration—now reveals itself as a watershed moment in the transformation of American power. What appeared as a surprising political realignment can be understood as the natural outcome of how technological authority has come to be legitimated and exercised. The fusion of tech sector autonomy with nationalist mission creates an especially powerful mechanism for concentrating control while evading accountability.

This consolidation of power gains momentum through its dual character—simultaneously promising salvation and warning of existential threat. Each technological milestone, whether China's DeepSeek or America's latest corporate breakthrough, amplifies both messianic visions of transcendence and dire warnings about strategic vulnerability.[23] The pattern mirrors the Cold War arms race, where the imperative to maintain advantage overwhelmed ethical concerns about nuclear proliferation and mutual assured destruction.

The doctrine of perpetual research and development serves as the practical mechanism through which this ideology maintains power. By positioning technological advancement as humanity's supreme obligation to future generations, tech leaders transform their pursuit of autonomy from democratic oversight into a moral imperative. Their followers—whether American MAGA supporters celebrating tech "mavericks" or Chinese nationals proud of their country's technological ascent—internalize justifications for their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.

The degradation of theodicy from Leibniz through Voltaire to Beckett's Lucky finds its contemporary echo in how tech discourse has devolved from philosophical argument to naked assertion of power. When Peter Thiel declares that "freedom and democracy are incompatible," or Marc Andreessen insists that "there is no material problem that cannot be solved with more technology," they no longer bother with reasoned justification. Like Lucky's rambling celebration of modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition, today's tech enthusiasm catalogs endless innovations while accepting the concentration of unprecedented power in unaccountable hands.

This matters because the technologies being developed—from artificial intelligence to brain-computer interfaces—have the potential to reshape the human condition in fundamental ways. The sidelining of ethical oversight through appeals to competition, progress, or national destiny threatens to leave crucial decisions about humanity's future in the hands of those whose power derives from avoiding democratic accountability. Breaking this cycle requires more than just new regulations or policies—it demands reconsidering how we understand technology's role in human flourishing and who gets to make decisions about its development.

The alternative is to continue down a path where technological development becomes ever more divorced from ethical consideration, driven by competition dynamics that serve primarily to concentrate power while manufacturing consent for that concentration. The inauguration scene that opened this analysis may then come to mark not just a moment of transformation but a point of no return—when the convergence of tech power and nationalist politics created a framework for governance beyond democratic control.

Endnotes:

  1. "Net Worth of Trump Inauguration Attendees Tops $1 Trillion with World's Richest in the Crowd," Sky News, January 21, 2025.
  2. Kelvin Chan et al., "Meta Eliminates Fact-checking in Latest Bow to Trump," Associated Press, January 7, 2025.
  3. "Elon Musk Spends $277 Million to Back Trump and Republican Candidates," CBS News, December 6, 2024.
  4. "Judge Denies Philadelphia DA's Request to Block Elon Musk's $1 Million Giveaway," ABC News, November 4, 2024.
  5. Meghan O'Gieblyn, "God in the Machine: My Strange Journey into Transhumanism," The Guardian, April 18, 2017.
  6. Julian Huxley, New Bottles for New Wine: Essays (London: Chatto & Windus, 1957).
  7. Raymond Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near (New York: Penguin Books, 2006).
  8. Nick Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
  9. Sigal Samuel, "The Broligarchs Have a Vision for the New Trump Term," Vox, January 20, 2025.
  10. Joy Buolamwini, Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What Is Human in a World of Machines (New York: Random House, 2023).
  11. "Joy Buolamwini and Sam Altman: Unmasking the Future of AI," Commonwealth Club World Affairs, November 2023, YouTube video.
  12. Karen Hao, "AI Is Taking Water from the Desert," The Atlantic, March 1, 2024.
  13. G.W. Leibniz, Theodicy: Essays on the Goodness of God, the Freedom of Man, and the Origin of Evil (La Salle: Open Court Publishing, 1985).
  14. Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts (New York: Grove Press, 1994).
  15. Marc Andreessen, "The Techno-Optimist Manifesto," a16z (blog), October 2023.
  16. Mario Poceski, Introducing Chinese Religions (New York: Routledge, 2009).
  17. "How Xi Jinping is Going Back to Confucius to Define China's Future," South China Morning Post, November 24, 2024.
  18. Zhao Shengnan, "Xi Cites Confucius as Positive Example for Modern Nation," China Daily, September 25, 2014
  19. Pan and Xu, "What the Sci-fi Blockbuster Wandering Earth II Can Teach Us About China's Global and Local Aspirations," The Conversation, February 12, 2023.
  20. Alexandra Grace Casale, "Sci-Fi, AI and the New Chinese Dream," Cognitive Business News, September 24, 2020.
  21. Shannon Tiezzi, "Why 2020 Is a Make-or-Break Year for China," The Diplomat, February 13, 2015.
  22. "Community of Common Destiny for Mankind," China Media Project, accessed January 31, 2025.
  23. "DeepSeek Forces a Global Technology Reckoning," New York Times, January 27, 2025.
  24. Siladitya Ray, "Trump Hails 'Super Genius' Elon Musk In Victory Speech—Ahead Of Likely Election Win," Forbes, November 6, 2024.
  25. Thomas Grove et al., "Elon Musk's Secret Conversations With Vladimir Putin," Wall Street Journal, October 25, 2024.
  26. Maggie Haberman, "Trump Put Musk on Phone With Zelensky During Call," New York Times, November 8, 2024.
  27. Fatima Hussein, "Elon Musk's DOGE Commission Gains Access to Sensitive Treasury Payment Systems," Associated Press, February 1, 2025.
  28. Chris Megerian, "Musk is a 'Special Government Employee,' the White House Confirms," Associated Press, February 3, 2025.

Friday, January 31, 2025

The New Techno-Nationalism: Power, Ideology, and the Eclipse of Ethics (draft 3)

 

The New Techno-Nationalism: Power, Ideology, and the Eclipse of Ethics

I. Introduction: A New Power Alignment

On January 20, 2025, Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States, marking his controversial return to the White House. The ceremony, held inside the US Capitol rotunda, became a showcase of America's new power brokers. In the front row, a who's who of Silicon Valley sat shoulder to shoulder: Elon Musk, fresh from pumping over $275 million into Trump's victory[4]; Mark Zuckerberg, who had just gutted Meta's fact-checking system at Trump's behest; Jeff Bezos, and other tech titans, their combined net worth exceeding an astonishing $1 trillion.[1]

The irony of this scene was palpable. Trump, who has long positioned himself as a populist champion of the "forgotten" rural Americans struggling with stagnant wages and rising living costs, surrounded himself with the ultra-elite oligarchs of the tech world. Yet this alliance was no mere marriage of convenience – it represented a deeper convergence between Silicon Valley's gospel of technological progress and nationalist politics, where self-appointed prophets of innovation found common cause with MAGA's vision of American renewal. The stark contrast between Trump's rhetoric of being the voice of the common people and the reality of his billionaire-studded inauguration highlights the bizarre nature of his populist claims – claims that somehow survived even as Musk doled out million-dollar daily "prizes" to voters in swing states through his PAC, a brazen scheme that distributed $17 million by election day.[2]

This gathering of tech moguls at the inauguration reflects a broader shift in our cultural values and the figures we choose to lionize. Nothing illustrates this transformation more clearly than examining who our leading biographers deem worthy of chronicling. When Walter Isaacson, perhaps America's preeminent biographer, looks to history, he finds subjects of profound humanistic impact: Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein – figures who not only innovated but wrestled deeply with the moral implications of their work, contributing to human understanding far beyond their specific fields.[3]

Yet when Isaacson surveys our present era for subjects of similar stature, he finds science and tech titans and venture capitalists: Elon Musk, Steve Jobs, Jennifer Doudna. These figures are celebrated not merely as innovators but as champions of American technological supremacy in an era of intensifying competition with China. This absence of contemporary figures whose impact transcends biotech, AI, and market disruption speaks volumes about our cultural priorities. That his collection marketed as the "genius biographies" places Jobs alongside Einstein, Franklin, and da Vinci reveals how thoroughly we've narrowed our vision of meaningful achievement. Where are today's philosophers? Poets? Composers and artists? Our culture seems to have lost interest in contributions that don't translate directly to big Tech and market capitalization.

II. The Origins of Techno-Futurism

The ideology that enables tech leaders to position themselves as humanity's rightful shepherds emerges from a peculiar fusion of science fiction and technical capability. This marriage of imagination and engineering has deep roots in humanity's eternal quest for transcendence. The term "transhumanism" first appeared in translations of Dante's Paradiso, describing the soul's journey toward divine life beyond mortal constraints.[5] When biologist Julian Huxley appropriated the term in 1957, he secularized this religious impulse, recasting transcendence as a scientific project.[6]

This secularization reached its apotheosis in Raymond Kurzweil's vision of the "Singularity"—a predicted moment in 2045 when humans will achieve "digital immortality" by uploading their consciousness to computers.[7] As director of engineering at Google, Kurzweil transformed ancient dreams of eternal life into concrete research and development priorities. His prediction that "the human species, along with the computational technology it created, will be able to solve age-old problems ... and will be in a position to change the nature of mortality" exemplifies how religious promises of salvation get reframed as technological inevitabilities.[8]

Today's tech leaders each offer their own variations on this technological salvation narrative. Elon Musk frames his Mars colonization project through Asimov's Foundation series, positioning himself as humanity's savior from a dying Earth. Mark Zuckerberg's Metaverse, inspired by Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, promises digital transcendence through virtual worlds, seemingly blind to that novel's dystopian warnings. Jeff Bezos draws directly from Star Trek and physicist Gerard O'Neill's space colony designs, envisioning millions living in cylindrical tubes among the stars.[9]

This fusion of scientific capability and science fiction imagination becomes institutionalized in elite technical education."At MIT's Media Lab, known as the 'Future Factory,' where Dr. Joy Buolamwini studied, students engage in courses that bridge speculative fiction and engineering practice. In one particular course, Science Fabrication, students were assigned science fiction novels and stories, and then challenged to imagine something futuristic to build—no matter how unrealistic it might initially seem—and attempt to create it within just six weeks.[10] Whether or not these inventions fully materialized, the nature of these assignments reveals a pedagogical commitment to balancing utopian imagination with engineering constraints. This approach treats AI as a fertile blend of futuristic imagination and contemporary technical knowledge, fostering a mindset where fictional possibilities shape technological development

The result is a powerful ideology that operates through long-term, speculative visions—whether utopian or catastrophic. Ray Kurzweil promises technological immortality while British philosopher, Nick Bostrom, warns of existential risks from artificial intelligence—both narratives deriving their influence from long-term scenarios that overshadow immediate challenges. This focus on existential outcomes, whether promising salvation or warning of catastrophe, serves to justify concentrated power and resources in the hands of tech leaders while diverting attention from pressing current problems. As Buolamwini observes, investment in AI safety research is dramatically higher when framed in terms of existential risks than when addressing immediate harms like algorithmic bias or systemic discrimination.[11] Recent funding patterns support this observation: while organizations focused on existential AI risks receive multi-million dollar grants, initiatives addressing immediate concerns like algorithmic bias and discrimination typically receive far more modest support—often in the range of hundreds of thousands rather than millions of dollars.[12]

Meanwhile, immediate problems multiply. Beyond familiar concerns about job displacement, privacy violations, and algorithmic bias, new evidence reveals how AI's physical infrastructure strains power grids and depletes water resources.[11] The "apprentice gap" Buolamwini identifies—the elimination of entry-level positions through which expertise traditionally developed—threatens to create "the age of the last experts."[ibid.] Yet these concrete issues receive far less attention and funding than speculative future scenarios.

This techno-futurist ideology gains additional force by filling the void left by declining traditional religion. As tech leaders position themselves as prophets of a technological salvation, resistance to oversight becomes recast as heroic defiance of small-minded bureaucracy. The result is an ideology that simultaneously promises transcendence while demanding autonomy from democratic accountability—a powerful combination that would soon find expression in competing national projects.

III. Western Technological Theodicy

This techno-futurist framework meshes seamlessly with what effectively constitutes a technological theodicy—a system for justifying present suffering by appeal to future salvation." "The pattern is familiar: just as Leibniz once offered a rational theodicy arguing that, due to God's ordering of the Universe, we live in "the best of all possible worlds,"[12] and Voltaire's satirical novella Candide mocked this rationalistic optimism through Dr. Pangloss's comical insistence that all suffering serves some greater good,[13] today's tech leaders offer their own, darker theodicy." While Pangloss merely glossed over suffering with jovial rationalization, tech leaders actively justify the negative consequences of their innovations—massive labor displacement, fragmenting of social cohesion, addiction-optimized platforms degrading mental health—as necessary sacrifices for their vision of technological transcendence.

The degraded character of this contemporary theodicy is illuminated by Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. In the play, the ironically named Lucky—a slave to the wealthy Pozzo—delivers a rambling monologue that preserves the form of traditional theodicy while descending into nihilistic incoherence. His litany of modern comforts ("penicillin, flying, gliding, floating, tennis games, golf") mixed with assertions about a God who "loves us dearly with some exceptions for reasons unknown" while some are "plunged in torment plunged in fire" offers a prescient parallel to today's techno-optimist rhetoric.[13]

This parallel becomes especially striking when we examine how tech leaders and their followers discuss innovation. "There is no material problem—whether created by nature or by technology—that cannot be solved with more technology," declares Marc Andreessen in his "Techno-Optimist Manifesto,"[14] expressing what amounts to a contemporary version of Pangloss's optimism, but with none of its innocence and all of its blindness to human cost. Like Lucky celebrating the modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition of servitude, tech enthusiasts catalog endless innovations while accepting their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.

The tech sector's embrace of both utopian and catastrophic visions further degrades traditional theodicy. Whether through Ray Kurzweil's promises of technological immortality or Nick Bostrom's warnings of existential risk from artificial intelligence, these narratives have abandoned even the pretense of philosophical justification. When Peter Thiel declares that "freedom and democracy are incompatible," he's not offering a reasoned argument but a naked assertion of technocratic power. The theodicy has completed its degradation from Leibniz's careful reasoning through Voltaire's satire and Beckett's absurdism to arrive at simple authoritarian declaration.

A hollowed-out version of Emersonian ideals of individual authenticity and self-reliance, reduced to the throwing off of all constraints and naked assertion of power, now legitimates both tech leaders' rejection of oversight and political strongmen who break democratic norms in the name of authentic leadership. The strongman validates the tech leaders' claims to prophetic vision and innovative genius—as when Trump celebrated Musk as a 'super genius' and 'new star' in his victory speech[citation]—while they in turn provide both technological capability and cultural capital to legitimate his authority. This symbiosis has evolved into an unprecedented integration of tech power into governance: from Musk's secret communications with Putin about geopolitical matters[citation], to his presence during crucial diplomatic calls[citation], to his leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) with its sweeping access to sensitive government systems[citation]. This fusion of tech and state power reached new heights when Musk, acting as both presidential advisor and DOGE director, announced plans to shut down USAID—with his team forcing access to secure systems and threatening federal officials who resisted, even as legal experts questioned the constitutional authority for such actions[citation]. What began as tech leaders seeking freedom from oversight has transformed into direct participation in matters of national security and governance at the highest levels, raising serious concerns about the concentration of both private and public power in unaccountable hands.

 

IV. Chinese Technological Theodicy

Where Western technological theodicy has degraded into nihilistic celebration of unconstrained innovation and raw power, Chinese theodicy presents a fundamentally different vision—one that transforms present suffering into meaningful sacrifice through a positive moral framework. Rather than explaining away hardships through appeals to market innovation or mysterious technological destiny, it provides clear state-sanctioned moral principles for understanding how individual sacrifice serves the collective good.

This theodicy gains force by combining traditional Confucian values with modern state technological ambitions, framed in terms of official party doctrine and state-guided sci-fi stories and blockbuster movies that have taken off in China. The virtue of ren (仁)—humaneness or benevolence toward others—provides a moral foundation for self-sacrifice.[15] The 21st century revival of Confucianism, encouraged by Xi, is brought into alignment with official moral and political precepts and doctrines of the State.[16,17] These are then propagated through increasingly popular and nationalistic science fiction such as the blockbuster movie series The Wandering Earth (2019) and The Wandering Earth II: The Prequel (2023).[18,19]In particular, Xi's signature slogan and ideology, the 'Chinese Dream,' emphasizes China's rise to 'fully developed' superpower status by 2049—a date that will mark one century since the founding of the PRC.[20]By then, according to official doctrine, China will be at the forefront of technology, with a united and prosperous citizenry and a state functioning for the good of not only all citizens, but all nations and humanity writ large.

The latter altruistic face of rising China brings us to another key doctrine in current official Chinese thought, viz. that of "Human Community with a Shared Future"—first articulated by Hu Jintao and refined by Xi in recent years. It has been incorporated into the constitution twice—first under Jintao in 2012, and again by Xi in 2018. This doctrine and its core principles provide an underlying leitmotif in the stories and movies under discussion. In 2018, it was added to the Constitution of the People's Republic of China as a core value of international relations. It was articulated negatively and positively. Negatively, China claims to be opposed to imperialism, hegemonism, and colonialism (the US and collective West are implicated in those). Positively, it is committed to unity and harmony among all the peoples of the world. As The China Media Project points out in an article on the doctrine:  "The phrase 'community of common destiny for mankind'... incorporates traditional elements of Chinese foreign policy that prioritize a [Chinese] state-centered approach to human rights, while subordinating individual rights to the basic question of national interest."[21]

In "The Wandering Earth," this idealistic doctrine manifests powerfully when the hero Liu Peiqiang, after seventeen years away from his family on a space station mission, must choose between reuniting with them or sacrificing himself to save humanity.[19] His final apology to his son for breaking his promise to return, before undertaking the suicide mission that will save Earth, exemplifies how personal loss becomes meaningful through service to collective purpose.

Unlike the market-driven development of science fiction in the West, China's state actively shapes the genre's themes and purposes. As Neil Gaiman recounts, after Chinese officials learned that American tech innovators were often inspired by childhood exposure to sci-fi, the state implemented strategic  support and oversight of the genre. A state official explained to Gaiman: "The Chinese were brilliant at making things if other people brought them the plans. But they did not innovate and they did not invent. They did not imagine."[19]

V. Competing Theodicies, Common Functions

These distinct theodicies reflect deep cultural and political differences while serving similarly powerful legitimating functions. Where Chinese theodicy provides a collective moral framework through state guidance, Western theodicy draws power from deeply rooted American ideals of individual authenticity and achievement."Tech leaders cast themselves as Emersonian heroes who have moved beyond mere resistance to oversight to actively seeking and wielding political power, all while claiming to serve innovation. Though this framework shows signs of degradation into nihilistic celebration of power, it maintains cultural resonance through its appeal to American dreams of individual achievement and expressive individualism. 

The fusion of tech and political theodicies in the West creates new pathways for concentrated power. When tech leaders and political strongmen mutually reinforce each other's authority—as exemplified by Musk's unprecedented appointment as a 'special government employee' with direct involvement in federal operations[22]—they transform challenges to their authority into opposition to authentic leadership and innovation itself. Understanding these legitimating mechanisms and their evolving manifestations becomes crucial as the boundaries between tech power and state authority grow increasingly fluid.

VI. Conclusion

The scene that opened our analysis—tech billionaires gathered at Trump's 2025 inauguration—now reveals itself as a watershed moment in the transformation of American power. What appeared as a surprising political realignment can be understood as the natural outcome of how technological authority has come to be legitimated and exercised. The fusion of tech sector autonomy with nationalist mission creates an especially powerful mechanism for concentrating control while evading accountability.

This consolidation of power gains momentum through its dual character—simultaneously promising salvation and warning of existential threat. Each technological milestone, whether China's DeepSeek or America's latest corporate breakthrough, amplifies both messianic visions of transcendence and dire warnings about strategic vulnerability.[22] The pattern mirrors the Cold War arms race, where the imperative to maintain advantage overwhelmed ethical concerns about nuclear proliferation and mutual assured destruction.

The doctrine of perpetual research and development serves as the practical mechanism through which this ideology maintains power. By positioning technological advancement as humanity's supreme obligation to future generations, tech leaders transform their pursuit of autonomy from democratic oversight into a moral imperative. Their followers—whether American MAGA supporters celebrating tech "mavericks" or Chinese nationals proud of their country's technological ascent—internalize justifications for their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.

The degradation of theodicy from Leibniz through Voltaire to Beckett's Lucky finds its contemporary echo in how tech discourse has devolved from philosophical argument to naked assertion of power. When Peter Thiel declares that "freedom and democracy are incompatible," or Marc Andreessen insists that "there is no material problem that cannot be solved with more technology," they no longer bother with reasoned justification. Like Lucky's rambling celebration of modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition, today's tech enthusiasm catalogs endless innovations while accepting the concentration of unprecedented power in unaccountable hands.

This matters because the technologies being developed—from artificial intelligence to brain-computer interfaces—have the potential to reshape the human condition in fundamental ways. The sidelining of ethical oversight through appeals to competition, progress, or national destiny threatens to leave crucial decisions about humanity's future in the hands of those whose power derives from avoiding democratic accountability. Breaking this cycle requires more than just new regulations or policies—it demands reconsidering how we understand technology's role in human flourishing and who gets to make decisions about its development.

The alternative is to continue down a path where technological development becomes ever more divorced from ethical consideration, driven by competition dynamics that serve primarily to concentrate power while manufacturing consent for that concentration. The inauguration scene that opened this analysis may then come to mark not just a moment of transformation but a point of no return—when the convergence of tech power and nationalist politics created a framework for governance beyond democratic control.

 Endnotes

1) "Net Worth of Trump Inauguration Attendees Tops $1 Trillion with World's Richest in the Crowd," Sky News, January 21, 2025.

2) Kelvin Chan et al., "Meta Eliminates Fact-checking in Latest Bow to Trump," Associated Press, January 7, 2025.

3) "Elon Musk Spends $277 Million to Back Trump and Republican Candidates," CBS News, December 6, 2024.

4)"Judge Denies Philadelphia DA's Request to Block Elon Musk's $1 Million Giveaway," ABC News, November 4, 2024.\

5) Meghan O'Gieblyn, "God in the Machine: My Strange Journey into Transhumanism," The Guardian, April 18, 2017.

6) Julian Huxley, New Bottles for New Wine: Essays (London: Chatto & Windus, 1957).

7) Raymond Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near (New York: Penguin Books, 2006).

8) Nick Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).

9) Sigal Samuel, "The Broligarchs Have a Vision for the New Trump Term," Vox, January 20, 2025.

10) Joy Buolamwini, Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What Is Human in a World of Machines (New York: Random House, 2023).

11) "Joy Buolamwini and Sam Altman: Unmasking the Future of AI," Commonwealth Club World Affairs, November 2023, YouTube video.

12) Karen Hao, "AI Is Taking Water from the Desert," The Atlantic, March 1, 2024.

 13) G.W. Leibniz, Theodicy: Essays on the Goodness of God, the Freedom of Man, and the Origin of Evil (La Salle: Open Court Publishing, 1985).

14) Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts (New York: Grove Press, 1994).

15) Marc Andreessen, "The Techno-Optimist Manifesto," a16z (blog), October 2023 

16) Mario Poceski, Introducing Chinese Religions (New York: Routledge, 2009).

17) "How Xi Jinping is Going Back to Confucius to Define China's Future," South China Morning Post, November 24, 2024.

18) Zhao Shengnan, "Xi Cites Confucius as Positive Example for Modern Nation," China Daily, September 25, 2014.

19) Pan and Xu, "What the Sci-fi Blockbuster Wandering Earth II Can Teach Us About China's Global and Local Aspirations," The Conversation, February 12, 2023.

20) Alexandra Grace Casale, "Sci-Fi, AI and the New Chinese Dream," Cognitive Business News, September 24, 2020.

21) Shannon Tiezzi, "Why 2020 Is a Make-or-Break Year for China," The Diplomat, February 13, 2015.

22)"Community of Common Destiny for Mankind," China Media Project, accessed January 31, 2025. 

23) "DeepSeek Forces a Global Technology Reckoning," New York Times, January 27, 2025.

24) Siladitya Ray, "Trump Hails 'Super Genius' Elon Musk In Victory Speech—Ahead Of Likely Election Win," Forbes, November 6, 2024.

25) Thomas Grove et al., "Elon Musk's Secret Conversations With Vladimir Putin," Wall Street Journal, October 25, 2024.

26) Maggie Haberman, "Trump Put Musk on Phone With Zelensky During Call," New York Times, November 8, 2024.

27) Fatima Hussein, "Elon Musk's DOGE Commission Gains Access to Sensitive Treasury Payment Systems," Associated Press, February 1, 2025.

28) Chris Megerian, "Musk is a 'Special Government Employee,' the White House Confirms," Associated Press, February 3, 2025.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Draft 1 of "The New Techno-Nationalism"


The New Techno-Nationalism: Power, Ideology, and the Eclipse of Ethics


I. Introduction: A New Power Alignment

On January 20, 2025, Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States, marking his controversial return to the White House. The ceremony, held inside the US Capitol rotunda, became a showcase of America's new power brokers. In the front row, a who's who of Silicon Valley sat shoulder to shoulder: Elon Musk, fresh from pumping over $275 million into Trump's victory, Mark Zuckerberg, who had just gutted Meta's fact-checking system at Trump's behest, Jeff Bezos, and other tech titans, their combined net worth exceeding an astonishing $1 trillion. [Citation needed: Campaign contribution data]

The irony of this scene was palpable. Trump, who has long positioned himself as a populist champion of the "forgotten" rural Americans struggling with stagnant wages and rising living costs, surrounded himself with the ultra-elite oligarchs of the tech world. Yet this alliance was no mere marriage of convenience – it represented a deeper convergence between Silicon Valley's gospel of technological progress and nationalist politics, where self-appointed prophets of innovation found common cause with MAGA's vision of American renewal. The stark contrast between Trump's rhetoric of being the voice of the common people and the reality of his billionaire-studded inauguration highlights the bizarre nature of his populist claims – claims that somehow survived even as Musk doled out million-dollar daily "prizes" to voters in swing states through his PAC, a brazen scheme that distributed $17 million by election day. [Citation needed: PAC distribution data]

This gathering of tech moguls at the inauguration reflects a broader shift in our cultural values and the figures we choose to lionize. Nothing illustrates this transformation more clearly than examining who our leading biographers deem worthy of chronicling. When Walter Isaacson, perhaps America's preeminent biographer, looks to history, he finds subjects of profound humanistic impact: Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein – figures who not only innovated but wrestled deeply with the moral implications of their work, contributing to human understanding far beyond their specific fields. [Citation needed: Isaacson biographies]

Yet, when Isaacson surveys our present era for subjects of similar stature, he finds science and tech titans and venture capitalists: Elon Musk, Steve Jobs, Jennifer Doudna. These figures are celebrated not merely as innovators but as champions of American technological supremacy in an era of intensifying competition with China. This absence of contemporary figures whose impact transcends biotech, AI, and market disruption speaks volumes about our cultural priorities. That his collection marketed as the "genius biographies" places Jobs alongside Einstein, Franklin, and da Vinci reveals how thoroughly we've narrowed our vision of meaningful achievement. Where are today's philosophers? Poets? Composers and artists? Our culture seems to have lost interest in contributions that don't translate directly to big Tech and market capitalization.

{Note: Consider adding specific example of how tech biography differs from traditional "genius" biography in treatment of ethical questions}

II. InterestThe Origins of Techno-Futurism

The ideology that enables tech leaders to position themselves as humanity's rightful shepherds emerges from a peculiar fusion of science fiction and technical capability. This marriage of imagination and engineering has deep roots in humanity's eternal quest for transcendence. The term "transhumanism" first appeared in translations of Dante's Paradiso, describing the soul's journey toward divine life beyond mortal constraints. When biologist Julian Huxley appropriated the term in 1957, he secularized this religious impulse, recasting transcendence as a scientific project.

This secularization reached its apotheosis in Ray Kurzweil's vision of the "Singularity" - a predicted moment in 2045 when humans will achieve "digital immortality" by uploading their consciousness to computers. As director of engineering at Google, Kurzweil transformed ancient dreams of eternal life into concrete research and development priorities. His prediction that "the human species, along with the computational technology it created, will be able to solve age-old problems ... and will be in a position to change the nature of mortality" exemplifies how religious promises of salvation get reframed as technological inevitabilities.

Today's tech leaders each offer their own variations on this technological salvation narrative. Elon Musk frames his Mars colonization project through Asimov's Foundation series, positioning himself as humanity's savior from a dying Earth. Mark Zuckerberg's Metaverse, inspired by Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, promises digital transcendence through virtual worlds, seemingly blind to that novel's dystopian warnings. Jeff Bezos draws directly from Star Trek and physicist Gerard O'Neill's space colony designs, envisioning millions living in cylindrical tubes among the stars. Each leader transforms science fiction into multi-billion dollar research programs while positioning themselves as prophets of a technological future.

This fusion of scientific capability and science fiction imagination becomes institutionalized in elite technical education. At MIT's Media Lab, where Dr. Joy Buolamwini studied, students engage in courses that explicitly bridge speculative fiction and engineering practice. She recalls how students would read science fiction novels and stories, then be challenged to imagine something futuristic to build - no matter how unrealistic it might initially seem - and attempt to create it within just six weeks. Whether or not these inventions fully materialized, the nature of these assignments reveals a pedagogical commitment to balancing utopian imagination with engineering constraints. This approach treats AI as "the daughter of art and science," fostering a mindset where fictional possibilities shape technical development.

The result is a powerful ideology that can accommodate both utopian and catastrophic visions. Ray Kurzweil promises technological immortality while Nick Bostrom warns of existential risks from artificial intelligence - yet both narratives serve to justify concentrated power and resources in the hands of tech leaders. As Buolamwini notes, "Where I see the most investment is where there is the most hysteria... AI safety getting hundreds of millions of dollars of investment with the framing of X risk versus harms research maybe getting millions."

Meanwhile, immediate problems multiply. Beyond familiar concerns about job displacement, privacy violations, and algorithmic bias, new evidence reveals how AI's physical infrastructure strains power grids and depletes water resources. The "apprentice gap" Buolamwini identifies - the elimination of entry-level positions through which expertise traditionally developed - threatens to create "the age of the last experts." Yet these concrete issues receive far less attention and funding than speculative future scenarios.

This techno-futurist ideology gains additional force by filling the void left by declining traditional religion. As tech leaders position themselves as prophets of a technological salvation, resistance to oversight becomes recast as heroic defiance of small-minded bureaucracy. The result is an ideology that simultaneously promises transcendence while demanding autonomy from democratic accountability - a powerful combination that would soon find expression in competing national projects.

III. Western Technological Theodicy

This techno-futurist framework meshes seamlessly with what can only be described as a technological theodicy - a system for justifying present suffering by appeal to future salvation. The pattern is familiar: just as Leibniz once offered a rational theodicy arguing due to God's ordering of the Universe,  we live in "the best of all possible worlds," and Voltaire satirized this rationalistic optimism through Dr. Pangloss's comical insistence that all suffering serves some greater good, today's tech leaders offer their own, darker theodicy. While Pangloss merely glossed over suffering with jovial rationalization, tech leaders actively justify the negative consequences of their innovations - massive labor displacement, fragmenting of social cohesion, addiction-optimized platforms degrading mental health - as necessary sacrifices for their vision of technological transcendence.

The degraded character of this contemporary theodicy is illuminated by Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. In the play, the ironically named Lucky - a slave to the wealthy Pozzo - delivers a rambling monologue that preserves the form of traditional theodicy while descending into nihilistic incoherence. His litany of modern comforts ("penicillin, flying, gliding, floating, tennis games, golf") mixed with assertions about a God who "loves us dearly with some exceptions for reasons unknown" while some are "plunged in torment plunged in fire" offers a prescient parallel to today's techno-optimist rhetoric. Just as Lucky's word-salad maintains recognizable elements of religious theodicy while stripping it of logical coherence, today's tech enthusiasts reproduce elaborate but increasingly nonsensical justifications for their own subordination to tech "saviors."

This parallel becomes especially striking when we examine how tech leaders and their followers discuss innovation. "There is no material problem—whether created by nature or by technology—that cannot be solved with more technology," declares Marc Andreessen in his "Techno-Optimist Manifesto," expressing what amounts to a contemporary version of Pangloss's optimism, but with none of its innocence and all of its blindness to human cost. Like Lucky celebrating the modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition of servitude, tech enthusiasts catalog endless innovations while accepting their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.

The tech sector's embrace of both utopian and catastrophic visions further degrades traditional theodicy. Whether through Ray Kurzweil's promises of technological immortality or Nick Bostrom's warnings of existential risk from artificial intelligence, these narratives have abandoned even the pretense of philosophical justification. When Peter Thiel declares that "freedom and democracy are incompatible," he's not offering a reasoned argument but a naked assertion of technocratic power. The theodicy has completed its degradation from Leibniz's careful reasoning through Voltaire's satire and Beckett's absurdism to arrive at simple authoritarian declaration.

This degraded theodicy gains additional force through its fusion with political power. The same Emersonian ideals that legitimate tech leaders' resistance to oversight now validate political strongmen who break democratic norms in the name of authentic leadership. When tech oligarchs gather at Trump's inauguration, they're not merely protecting business interests - they're affirming a shared vision of heroic individualism against bureaucratic constraint. The political strongman validates tech leaders' rejection of oversight while they in turn legitimate his breaking of democratic norms. Both claim to serve authentic American values against a regulatory state that would limit true innovation and leadership.

Chinese Technological Theodicy

Where Western technological theodicy has degraded into nihilistic celebration of unconstrained innovation, Chinese theodicy presents a fundamentally different vision - one that transforms present suffering into meaningful sacrifice through a positive moral framework. Rather than explaining away hardships through appeals to market innovation or mysterious technological destiny,  it provides clear state-sanctioned moral principles for understanding how individual sacrifice serves the collective good.

This theodicy gains force by combining traditional Confucian values with modern state technological ambitions, framed in terms of state-guided sci-fi stories and blockbuster movies that have taken off in China. The virtue of ren (仁) - humaneness or benevolence toward others - provides a moral foundation for self-sacrifice. The 21st century revival of Confucianism, encouraged by Xi, is brought into alignment with official moral and political precepts and doctrines of the State. These are then propagated through  increasingly popular, and nationalistic science fiction such as the blocbuster movies series The Wandering Earth (2019)  and the Wandering Earth: II (The Prequel) of 2023. Which state principles do these movies and stories encode?

In particular, Xi's signature slogan and ideology of the "Chinese Dream"which emphasizes the rise of China to "fully developed" superpower by 2049 (which will mark one century since the founding of the PRC). By then, according to official doctrine, China will be at the forefront of technology, with a united and prosperous citizenry and a state functioning for the good of not only all citizens, but all nations and humanity writ large. This latter altruistic face of rising China brings us to another key doctrine in current Chinese Thought, viz.  that of "Human Community with a Shared Future"-- first articulated by by Hu Jintao and refined by Xi in recent years. It   has been incorporated into the constitution twice-- first under Jintao in 2012, and again by Xi in 2018. This is doctrine and its core principles provide  an underlying leitmotif in the stories and movies under discussion.  In 2018, it was  added to the Constitution of the People's Republic of China as a core value of  international relations. It was articulated negatively and positively. Negatively, China claims to be opposed to imperialism , hegemonism, and colonialism (the US and collective West are implicated in those). Positively, it is committed to unity and harmony among all the peoples of the world. The China Media Project provides this capsule summary which helps to convey its meaning:

"The phrase "community of common destiny for mankind"... incorporates traditional elements of Chinese foreign policy that prioritize a [Chinese] state-centered approach to human rights, while subordinating individual rights to the basic question of national interest. [China Media Project: https://chinamediaproject.org/the_ccp_dictionary/community-of-common-destiny-for-mankind/ ]

 In "The Wandering Earth," this idealistic doctrine manifests powerfully when the hero Liu Peiqiang, after seventeen years away from his family on a space station mission, must choose between reuniting with them or sacrificing himself to save humanity. His final apology to his son for breaking his promise to return, before undertaking the suicide mission that will save Earth, exemplifies how personal loss becomes meaningful through service to collective purpose. The 2023 prequel reinforces this theme through multiple acts of collective sacrifice, including 300 elderly astronauts volunteering for a mission to save Earth. Such narratives don't merely explain suffering but elevate it to noble service.

The state actively cultivates these themes through strategic support of science fiction. This guided development reflects deeper contrasts with Western theodicy. Where Western tech leaders celebrate throwing off constraints as proof of authentic vision, Chinese narratives show how proper constraints enable technology to serve human flourishing. Having lifted hundreds of millions out of  poverty, the CCP positions itself as uniquely capable of directing technological progress for collective benefit. The suffering of individuals and groups adversely affected by development policies are presented by the state as "personal sacrifices" sometimes necessary to  the realization of the "Chinese Dream". This party ideology comes through clearly in state-guided Sci Fi in today's China.

Unlike the market-driven development of science fiction in the West, China's state actively shapes the genre's themes and purposes. As Neil Gaiman recounts, after Chinese officials learned that American tech innovators were often inspired by childhood exposure to sci-fi, they implemented strategic state support and oversight of the genre. A state official explained to Gaiman: 'The Chinese were brilliant at making things if other people brought them the plans. But they did not innovate and they did not invent. They did not imagine.'"[cited in Alexandra Casale: Cognitive Business Magazine; 2020 provide link] The dual function of sci-fi in China, then is to inspire novel ideas/innovation, while reinforcing a state-sanctioned national and moral code that simultaneously a) opposes the imputed ideological dangers of US and the West (hegemonism, domination, exploitation, imperialism, conquest et al.) and b) promotes the universal, international benevolent conception of China which is a testament to its own overcoming of humiliatio at the hands of the West and Japan, and to the embodiment to its highest ideals of shared prosperity and international benevolence. Such is the vision promoted for public consumption and internalization by the CCP. Suffering and death are all but inevitable on the path to the realization of the Chinese Dream and the Shared Future of Humanity. Such "setbacks" and "prices of progress" are  ratioinalized in the collectivist theodicy.

 

V. Competing Theodicies, Common Functions

These distinct theodicies reflect deep cultural and political differences while serving similarly powerful legitimating functions. Where Chinese theodicy provides a collective moral framework through state guidance, Western theodicy draws power from deeply rooted American ideals of individual authenticity and achievement. Tech leaders cast themselves as Emersonian heroes whose resistance to oversight reflects not mere self-interest but authentic nonconformity in service of innovation. Though this framework shows signs of degradation into nihilistic celebration of power, it maintains cultural resonance through its appeal to American dreams of individual achievement and expressive individualism.

The fusion of tech and political theodicies in the West creates particularly powerful resistance to democratic oversight. When tech leaders and political strongmen mutually reinforce each other's claims to transcend institutional constraints, they transform opposition to concentrated power into opposition to authentic leadership and innovation itself. Understanding these distinct but equally powerful legitimating mechanisms - and their evolving political manifestations - is essential for grasping how technological development gains authority through different cultural and political forms.
 

IV. Conclusion

The scene that opened our analysis - tech billionaires gathered at Trump's 2025 inauguration - now reveals itself as a watershed moment in the transformation of American power. What appeared as a surprising political realignment can be understood as the natural outcome of how technological authority has come to be legitimated and exercised. The fusion of tech sector autonomy with nationalist mission creates an especially powerful mechanism for concentrating control while evading accountability.

This consolidation of power gains momentum through its dual character - simultaneously promising salvation and warning of existential threat. Each technological milestone, whether China's DeepSeek or America's latest corporate breakthrough, amplifies both messianic visions of transcendence and dire warnings about strategic vulnerability. The pattern mirrors the Cold War arms race, where the imperative to maintain advantage overwhelmed ethical concerns about nuclear proliferation and mutual assured destruction. Then as now, competition becomes its own justification, drowning out questions about human consequences.

The doctrine of perpetual research and development serves as the practical mechanism through which this ideology maintains power. By positioning technological advancement as humanity's supreme obligation to future generations, tech leaders transform their pursuit of autonomy from democratic oversight into a moral imperative. Their followers, whether American MAGA supporters celebrating tech "mavericks" or Chinese nationals proud of their country's technological ascent, internalize justifications for their own diminishing agency in an increasingly technocratic system.

The degradation of theodicy from Leibniz through Voltaire to Beckett's Lucky finds its contemporary echo in how tech discourse has devolved from philosophical argument to naked assertion of power. When Peter Thiel declares that "freedom and democracy are incompatible," or Marc Andreessen insists that "there is no material problem that cannot be solved with more technology," they no longer bother with reasoned justification. Like Lucky's rambling celebration of modern conveniences that fail to address his fundamental condition, today's tech enthusiasm catalogs endless innovations while accepting the concentration of unprecedented power in unaccountable hands.

This matters because the technologies being developed - from artificial intelligence to brain-computer interfaces - have the potential to reshape the human condition in fundamental ways. The sidelining of ethical oversight through appeals to competition, progress, or national destiny threatens to leave crucial decisions about humanity's future in the hands of those whose power derives from avoiding democratic accountability. Breaking this cycle requires more than just new regulations or policies - it demands reconsidering how we understand technology's role in human flourishing and who gets to make decisions about its development.

The alternative is to continue down a path where technological development becomes ever more divorced from ethical consideration, driven by competition dynamics that serve primarily to concentrate power while manufacturing consent for that concentration. The inauguration scene that opened this analysis may then come to mark not just a moment of transformation but a point of no return - when the convergence of tech power and nationalist politics created a framework for governance beyond democratic control.
 
PD 1/29/25
 
 
 


Friday, August 4, 2023

Deliberate control of information and knowledge in Wikipedia's "Origins of Covid" page

Note: A revised version of this post along with discussion can be found here: 


I use Wikipedia with some regularity, and often include links to it when I leave comments on certain topics. However, I have noticed that the more politically significant and controversial the topic, the less likely it is that entries are fair, accurate and balanced. I first noticed this when reading biographies of contemporary politcians. I rarely edit Wiki, but one of the then-Dem candidates in a local primary had a bio that contained what I knew to be untruths. I was able to start a discussion page on this, and some of the untruths were removed after a I presented evidence. It wasn't as easy as I'd imagined, but far from impossible to edit as the open source model is intended to work. Since then, I've seen other cases like this in pages related not only to politicians, but also contemporary topics of political significance   One clear example of which I became aware recently is the origin of Covid 19. Type "wiki origin of covid" into your google search bar, and immediately you will see the following in enlarged print, with some clauses highlighted:


"Most scientists agree that, as with many other pandemics in human history, the virus is likely derived from a bat-borne virus transmitted to humans in a natural setting. Many other explanations, including several conspiracy theories, have been proposed." (Google search result)

 

Below the authoritative quote is a link to the Wikipedia page, "Origin of Covid-19," from which it comes.  The concluding sentence  of the opening paragraph of that page reads thus:


"Some scientists and politicians have speculated that SARS-CoV-2 was accidentally released from a laboratory. This theory is not supported by evidence. [followed by a supposedly corroborating footnote #15]"

A few questions:

1) Which scientists and politicians have "speculated" that SARS-CoV-2 was accidentally released from a laboratory?

2) What arguments and evidence did they adduce?

3) Are the arguments and evidence any less well supported than the Wuhan Meat Market/Natural Spillover explanation embraced in the article as *the* "scientific consensus?" 

Perhaps most importantly:

4) WHO are the sources for the conclusion that lab-leaks can be ruled out as "non-scientific" or "conspiracy theory?"

If we start with the last question, the WHO question, we will be led to discover the other answers.  So what is the source corresponding to footnote #15 which states "[lab-leak theory] is not supported by evidence."??

That footnote directs readers to a 2021 Cell article titled The Origins of SARS-CoV-2: A Critical Review. The lead author is Eddie Holmes, whose role in establishing the natural spillover as the "only" valid explanation has been discussed previously on this blog, including in an OP from earlier this week by Germaine which includes interview footage of Holmes interspersed with the contents of his own contradictory leaked Slack messages to the other scientists with whom he co-wrote the decisive article Proximate Origins of Covid 19 (PO)  that has come under fire by a rather large group of international scientists, several of whom have testified in Oversight Hearings on the topic. But it doesn't stop there. Having combed through many of the journal articles referenced by "the authorities" (gov't agencies like the NIH and MSM science journalists) the list of co-authors for A Critical Review (2021) includes a familiar cast of characters in the literature. 

All of the authors of the Proximate Origins paper are listed as co-authors in A Critical Review with the exception of Ian Lipkin who stopped claiming that lab leak scenarios were all but impossible in 2021. The PO co-author said in a statement to the Washington Post in 2021:

“If they’ve got hundreds of bat samples that are coming in, and some of them aren’t characterized, how would they know whether this virus was or wasn’t in this lab? They wouldn’t.”

 Statements like that one by Lipkin provide on reason that his name is seldom invoked by his PO co-authors to debunk lab leak scenarios. Another, darker reason, is the fact that at Ian Lipkin failed to disclose the fact that he worked for the NIH-funded company, EcoHealth Alliance,  at the heart of the debate from 2012-2014, and co-authored at least 10 research paper with the group between 2011-2021. As US Right To Know journalist, Emily Kopp documented, at least one of these papers was on novel Coranaviruses that "EcoHealth and its partners sampled around the world." Between his distancing himself from conclusion of PO, and the fact that he failed to disclose conflict of interests, it's small wonder that his old establishment friends seldom bring him up. But, though PO is cited as evidence on the Wiki page, the ethical breach of Dr. Lipkin is not discussed, nor is the conflict of interest of lead-author K Andersen who was awaiting an $8 mil. grant from the NIH while writing PO. The grant came through a few months after the March PO publication in August, 2020.

 

 

At any rate, Lipkin's reservations about the mainstream theory he helped to establish are not mentioned in Wikipedia's page. They are also left out of the paper Wiki cites in para 1which is supposedly fair and balanced, i.e. "A Critical Review." So we have Kristian Andersen (lead author of PO who testified last month that he "changed his mind from lab leak theory to natural spillover" in days based on unspecified "new evidence." We have Robert Garry, another outspoken co-author whose Slack messages also reveal that in private he worried intensely about lab leak scenarios, like his colleague Kristian Andersen,  both before, during and after the Nature Medicine publishied PO.  The 2 scientists appeared together last month testifying before Congress. 

We NOW know (thanks to massive leaks of private messages discussed in several posts here) that Andersen and Garry (and the others)  bluntly contradict the conclusions of their own paper.. Both continue to claim that their beliefs changed rapidly due to "the scientific process," even within a few short days. In the past, both spoke of "new evidence" they had discovered; but the "evidence" falls far short of justifying the conclusion of the article. Robert Garry was interviewed 9 months ago (BEFORE we had all the hundreds of messages he refers to throughout the interview). One email he wrote, though, had already been leaked. Written 2 days prior to the article, the email  bluntly states,  "I just can't figure out how this gets accomplished in nature" (referring to the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 occurring without engineering). In the interview, he dances around questions asked, and among other things cites (dubious) evidence that was (mis)-used in 2020 to make the case. This "evidence" involved the hypothesis that Pangolins were the intermediate host of the virus that became SARS2-CoV-2 because they have a particular receptor cite that might have helped to explain the jump from bats to humans. Garry, in 2022, brings that "evidence" up, and correctly, the interviewer states, "that proves nothing." At the time, it would not have been possible to quote Kristian Andersen (Garry's senior colleague) saying in a private message of that time period leaked last month the same exacct thing:

"[T]he more sequences we see from Pangolins (and we have been analyzing/discussing these very carefully), the less likely it seems that they're the intermediate hosts. Unfortunately, none of this helps refute a lab leak origin and the possibility must be considered as a serious scientific theory (which is what we do), and not dismissed out of hand as another "conspiracy theory."

If that were not enough to make one skeptical of the claim that "pangolins were definitive evidence," there were biological and zoological reviews of such claims that pangolins concluding they were NOT  intermediate hosts. Here is one example from Oct., 2020-- 2 years prior to the interview with Garry below. Keep these things in mind as you watch Robert Garry talk about what was then a single leaked email in the following video interview. He says swings from one rebuttal to the next, citing"pangolins" as evidence, and even making the absurd claim (in light of all the other messages we now have) that he was "just playing devil's advocate" in that email. Since he and his colleagues from the PO paper, which was overseen by Fauci and Collins and Jeremy Ferrar in UK, are all listed as authors for the definitive paper cited in the opening paragraph of Wikipedia's article, it is more than fair to ask HOW these experts defend their own scientific authority on this topic. 



It is worth emphasizing that though Garry (above) says that Anthony Fauci, Francis Collins, and Jeremy Ferrar (all of whom were conferencing with the authors, providing feedback, advising revisions and word-choice substitutions as we now know from released texts) were "agnostic" and encouraged the writers to follow the evidence wherever it led. They were, in his words, completely
"hands off" on the writing of the exceedingly influential article. We now know this is tragically wrong. They are on the record in their own leaked private words,  and speak for themselves in the many transcripts. They also speak through Eddie Holmes who made final revisions to the paper without consulting "lead author" Kristian Anderssen. In order to explain such an unusual and anti-scientific maneuver, Holmes apologized in a message to Andersen adding, "pressure from the 'higher-ups.'

 

There is also damning circumstantial evidence of corruption and graft. Lead author, K Andersen, was -- at the time of writing PO-- applying for a grant from the NIH. Not only did he not announce a conflict of interests, but after the paper was published, his laboratory received an $8.9 million NIH grant in August of 2020.When Anthony Fauci cited the paper from  the podium of the White House, he claimed that the it showed that the data were “totally consistent with a jump of a species from an animal to a human,” all but completely ruling out lab origins. Kristian Andersen, in a euphoric mood, then tweeted, "We RUUUUUUUULE! That's tenure secured, right there." Remarkably, Andersen has only doubled down since, testifying under oath that his "change of mind" was "just a text book case of the scientific method." Garry was at his side concurring during that congressional hearing last month.

Investigative journalist, Emily Kopp of US Right To Know, and Biosafety Now!'s Dana Parrish both criticized Wikipedia for making the page all but impossible to edit even by credentialed scientists who do not agree with the unscientific conclusion. Parrish claims that Wikipedia has given authority to virologist, James Duehr (Mt. Sinai/Icahan ) to control edits on that page.  This is his user page on Wikipedia as "Shibbolethink:" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Shibbolethink  and this is his academic page: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/James-Duehr  The Wiki discussion page is locked for most users, and those who make changes,  according to Parrish , can watch the text revert to its former condition "in minutes."(Dana Parish: Twitter, August 2).  Duehr also has also spent a lot of time on Reddit trying to establish natural spillover as the official account of Covid 19 origins: https://www.reddit.com/r/science/comments/gk6y95 /covid19_did_not_come_from_the_wuhan_institute_of/    This is not open and transparent science, but evidence of a "mission" to cement into place an "official narrative" despite all the mounting counter-evidence. As Matt Ridley and Alina Chan write in the Wall St. Journal, Eddie Holmes-- who put the finishing touches on the paper without even consulting any other authors-- told the others how "happy" the "higher-ups" were with the results. They write:

"Shortly before their paper went public, evolutionary biologist and virologist Edward Holmes of Sydney University reported to his fellow authors that “Jeremy Farrar and Francis Collins are very happy” with the final draft. Two of the authors wrote in private messages that they had rushed their paper out under pressure from unidentified “higher-ups.” The role of these senior scientists went unacknowledged in the paper."(WSJ: 7/26/23)

In my research of this manufactured consensus, I found a small and recurring list of named authors and co-authors whose papers more often cite their *other papers* than any new laboratory or forensic evidence. The circularity is dizzying. A short list of the VIPs on this list includes PO authors, Kristian Andersen, Robert Garry, Andrew Rambaut (but not, as mentioned Lipkin who changed his mind). It also includes scientists with whom those authors were closely affiliated including EcoHealth president, Peter Daszak, Jeremy Farrar, Angela Rasmussen, Michael Worobey, Susan Weiss and several others who have written "dispassionately" and served as primary sources for the media since 2020.

Michael Worobey wrote a "definitive" (actually a flawed and debunked) article claiming the Wuhan Market was definitely the "epicenter" of the outbreak. In a separate post here recently, I showed that the cluster mapping he relied upon drew on ~6% of the early Wuhan cases. Unscientifically, Worobey stated, "we assumed that the locations of the others would be the same." The Washington Post issued an editorial which harshly criticized the study . Worobey told WaPo:

 

"There's probably at least 10 times more cases that we haven't sampled because only something like 6 percent end up in the hospital. We fully expect the cases that we don't sample to come from exactly the same geographic distribution as the ones we do sample." (WaPo: 11/27/23)

That is not logical or scientific. Why would one expect that? Further, a geo-scientist showed that the map had been badly interpreted in the study, and also by those who used it for further extrapolations. 


Peter Dasziak who is president of the group that did the NIH funded research, and principal investigator, went on to play a major role in the WHO's 2022 "investigation of origins in China," along with Jeremy Farrar (a "higher-up" on the conference call over the PO article, and later the WHO 's Chief Scientist  . From government (Fauci, Collins on the conference call) to WHO (Jeremy Ferrar) to NIH-funded Wuhan experiments researcher (Peter Daszak of EcoHealth) to ex-employees of EcoHealth (Ian Lipkin) to scientists like MichaelWorobey, who (after Biden called for a new investigation into origins) provided psuedoscientific "evidence" in favor of natural spillover, to scientists in the same circle such as Angela Rasmussen and Susan Weiss, whose names appear on several of the related journal articles in Science, as well as being heavily quoted by MSM articles.-- we have here a small, powerful special interest constellation which has taken advantage of its power to wall itself off from dissenting scientists and public health experts, establishing and (to this day)maintaining  the MSM "orthodox" narrative that consigns lab-based theories to the "fringe/conspiracy" category-- even when the national intelligence of this country is split on the question.  


Having explained the basis for the sourcing in the Wikipedia entry on Origins of Covid, we can see why editing privileges for this article would be heavily guarded and why attempts to insert countervailing evidence by scientists have failed. 

I can't conclude from this that all, many or most other articles in Wiki involving large vested interests and political/state interests are also subject to epistemic manipulation. But the manufacture of consensus in this case provides-- at the very least-- a good reason to further research the topic of Wikipedia's treatment of  topics which are both consequential and controversial in such areas as science, politics and biographies, among others. We have learned, through the Covid-related leaks, that MSM and our own gov't cannot necessarily be trusted in the vital area of Public Health and safety. Perhaps it is not shocking, then, to learn that the most widely used encyclopedia in the world has been equally partial in the Origins of Covid area. Though most academics do not use Wiki for citations, I've seen some that do. Certainly it is regarded as some kind of epistemic guardrail to settle disputes online everyday. It is, therefore, important to study the editorial process very carefully now, and with great attention to just who can and cannot open discussions and make substantive changes. How much deliberate knowledge-distortion does or does not occur on this cite? As a user and contributor to Wikipedia, and a concerned citizen, I would like to know the answer to that question.

Here is the Talk/Discussion page for the Origins article which establishes the page as a "Contentious Topic" subject to oversight and control  by the Wikipedia Arbitration Committee


Do any readers here have experience with related issues on Wikipedia? What do you make of all this?