Patrice Riemens on Tue, 6 May 2014 16:46:31 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium Part Two, |
Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium Part Two, section #3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- A Note and a Request for Comment: on 'libertarism' As you will see I am using that world to give a name to the libertarian ideology, but after a discussion with the authors it turns out to be a neologism - in English. Or if you like, a gallicism/batavism - since both French and Dutch language use the word 'libertarisme'. French, according to Wikipedia, even with the luxury of both a left-wing ('libertaire') and a right-wing ('libertarien') flavor - libertarisme in Dutch is solely 'anarcho-capitalist', apparently ;-) Now the Ippolita Collective folks seem to prefer the word 'libertarianism', which I find a bit ... cluncky. So I am not convinced - yet. What do _you_ think? (This is basically a 'Quick-and-Dirty translation, remenber?) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Technological Darwinism from the Paypal Mafia to Facebook: the resistible rise of anarcho-capitalism. Following this disgression, a necessary one so as to give some economic and political context to our argument, let's turn back to social networks, and more specifically, to Facebook. It is no secret that Facebook belongs to the libertarian galaxy in the US - it can even be said to belong to its hard-core anarcho-capitalist wing. Big European newspapers covered this issue already years ago [12]. This story holds, at first glance, little relevance to the Facebook saga, but in fact it is of crucial import, because it shows that the world's largest social network is actually part of a much larger strategy, which, at the very last, is geared towards the viral propagation of libertarism-inspired values and practices. In the first part of this book, we have used Facebook as an example of a social network whose modus operandi stands very far from the way we perceive things. This does not mean that the other big social media (Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+ etc.) come out scot-free in our analysis. What holds true for Facebook also holds true for the others, despite the vast differences in terms of targeted demographics, but also as regard to their respective histories and their impact on society. In order to streamline somewhat our analysis we are going to focus on Peter Thiel, the zillionaire champion of anarcho-capitalism. Note that not all social media are as closely linked to anarcho-capitalism as Facebook is, but just like Facebook stands for the quintessence of on-line sociality, so is Peter Thiel an iconic representative of the spirit of libertarism within a large number of capitalist (ad)ventures born in Silicon valley - and a key figure to understand the way it functions. As (the very) first 'angel' investor in Facebook with a five lakhs US$ checkoff in 2004, Peter Thiel now holds 3% of Facebook's shares. Thiel made his name as celebrity /venture capitalist/ in the Bay Area - he manages, among others the Clarion capital hedge fund (with a $ 3bn portfolio) and also the Founders Fund /venture fund. Born in Frankfurt am Main (Germany) in the late sixties, he went to study at Stanford, the well-known cradle of Californian ueber-capitalism. At 46, Peter Thiel is amongst the 400 richest men on the planet [13]. He contributed generously to ultra-right, libertarian Congressman Ron Paul's presidential campaign fund when he stood up against George Bush in the republican primaries. He is also member of the Bilderberg Group, officially a yearly conference gathering of influential politicians, military people, industrialists and bankers discussing the planet's problems. And he has also forcefully expressed his political opinions on the Cato Institute's Cato Unbound blog [14]. One of Tiel's pet projects is the framing of a radical critique of the social and political set-up of the United States and, by extension and pars pro toto, of the whole western value system, this since the United States are the standard-bearers of freedom worldwide and, also the best performers in the western world. Democracy, according to Thiel, cannot be reconcillied with freedom, because nation-sates and other supposedly democratic institutions choke individual liberties. On this particular point, we actually could agree: libertarians, in the traditional, socialist (left wing) meaning of the word [see note/RFC above - transl] , say exactly the same thing. Representative democracy in its current dispensation is far removed from the idea of direct democracy, or better still, of the free and autonomous management of the commonwealth. Corporate interests, together with and just like the structural cross-overs between organised crime, institutions, and major financial and economic groups have all too often reduced democracy to a risible ritual on election day. Yet Thiel's approach is in other aspects clearly more reactionary, not to say mysoginist: "Since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women ? two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians ? have rendered the notion of ?capitalist democracy? into an oxymoron."[15] Peter Thiel is an extreme representant of free-for-all capitalism [16]. He is situated beyond being merely against socialism: he is quite simply anti-social. Together with numerous other eminent personalities around him, he is staunchly supports technological darwinism, a new version of social darwinism, this time framed in terms of eugenics and technology. According to that 'vision', the best technology shall free the most deserving individuals, so as to outgrow the limitations of the human species. And this with the ultimate objective to become a technological superhuman, a /Uebermench/ set free from death. The concept of well-defined, static identities, which are one of Zuckerberg's mantras, recurrs in Thiel's biography also: he proclaims his homosexuality and is a strong defender of right-wing gays, whom he lavishly funded through the American Foundation for Equal Rights and GOProud. He also maintains close relationships with selected politicians, such as Meg Whitman, whom he also funded generously. Whitman, who represents a particularly perverse brand of feminism, is a former CEO of E-Bay (which bought PayPal), and a former republican candidate for the California governorship in 2010. Now Thiel made his fortune through his participating in the launch of what has become the world's most prevalent electronic payment system. And Paypal was also Thiel's first 'global' political project, since it is based on the core idea that central banks should be deprived of their role as the custodians of currency. This would sound like a brilliant attempt to set the world free - if it did not result in all powers ending up in the hands of what Peter Thiel himself has proudly dubbed 'The Paypal Mafia', with himself cast in the role of godfather [17]. ------------- [12] See for instance Tom Hodkinson "With friends like these", The Guardian 14 & 16 February 2008: http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2008/jan/14/facebook Back then Facebook had 'only' 59 million members ... (note by translator: I just went thru the article (again): believe me, it's a 'must read'!) [13] Peter Thiel creeped up from #373 on Forbes' America's richest 400 List in 2010 to #314 in 2013 - and he ranks #3 in Forbes' tech investors 'Midas List'. (http://www.forbes.com/profile/peter-thiel/) [14] http://www.cato-unbound.org/ [15] Peter Thiel, "The Education of a Libertarian", Cato Unbound blog, April 2009: http://www.cato-unbound.org/2009/04/13/peter-thiel/education-libertarian [16] Peter Thiel himself provides the best entry to his social-economic belief system in an article titled "The Optimistic Thought Experiment", Stanford University, Hoover Institution: http://www.hoover.org/publications/policy-review/article/5646 [17] Thiel gladly profiles himself as "the Don of the Paypal Mafia". A good account of the Paypal (Mafia) saga can be read in a 2007 issue of /Fortune Magazine/: http://money.cnn.com/2007/11/13/magazines/fortune/paypal_mafia.fortune/ ----------------------------- Translated by Patrice Riemens This translation project is supported and facilitated by: The Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/) The Antenna Foundation, Nijmegen (http://www.antenna.nl - Dutch site) (http://www.antenna.nl/indexeng.html - english site under construction) Casa Nostra, Vogogna-Ossola, Italy # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org