Comment by dismalaf
1 day ago
Thiel and Karp have both said in various places that western civilization is worth saving and that it's better that we develop this power than enemies of the West, and I'm not going to lie, I'm inclined to agree with them.
Do you really think Putin, Xi and Khamenei are better stewards of the world than the West?
The West's introspective nature is good and all, but sometimes we unwittingly forget that there is actual evil in the world, and it's much worse than saying mean things on Twitter, or putting facts above feelings.
Students in Iran literally die protesting the regime, meanwhile students here who live a life of luxury and don't know what actual oppression is "protest"/simp for the Iranians (or one of their various proxies)...
And it is forgotten that people will do evil under the auspices of “western ideals” and power unchecked leads to an erosion of those ideals.
Reminder - Iran offered support after 9/11 but instead we rebuffed them and called them part of the axis of evil just because. Right at a time when they were really modernizing again but our jingoistic attitudes entrenched the autocrats further.
They agreed to a nuclear deal that we tore up just because.
We overthrew their government.
We have presidential candidates singing “bomb bomb bomb Iran” for fun.
The reason we have a bad relationship with Iran and a large reason why they have bad leaders is because the US has made it so.
So why does Iran have bad relations with most of their neighbours? Why does Iran support terrorism against countries that aren't the US?
Did the US make Iran oppress women and minorities? Everytime Iran executes people who oppose the regime, is it because the US made them do it?
I don't know the answer to your question, but it struck me that we can ask exactly the same question about the US today.
1 reply →
Because Iran is Shia and the rest of its neighbours are ruled by Sunnis. Some even have majority Shia populations that can be restive under a Sunni autocrat.
Even then, Iran still has strong ties with all of those neighbors. They trade actively, US sanctions be damned, and would pounce at the opportunity to invest in Iran if given the opportunity (Iran's industries are basically all owned by the Ayatollah and IRGC currently).
This is a very strange argument. I don’t have a problem in principle with a country developing a security apparatus. It’s how they use it, is the issue. The current US regime doesn’t feel like a particularly custodian of Western, liberal democracy
> The current US regime doesn’t feel like a particularly custodian of Western, liberal democracy
With it's middle finger to due process and courts, it clearly isn't. It's a particularly un-American administration.
Thiel has explicitly advocated for the abolition of democracy and is funding contemporary efforts to do so. What privileges our students enjoy only exist because he hasn’t succeeded yet. You pose a false choice between authoritarian regimes. Claiming that Iranian protesters have it worse so we shouldn’t protect the free speech rights of our students is similarly disingenuous. It divides people using guilt around relative privilege rather than directing our efforts to solidarity in fighting the ruling class, of which Thiel is a part.
> free speech rights of our students
Based on the article, a foreigner is being denied entry to the US. Every country has the right to do this for whatever reason they see fit. Most countries don't allow foreigners to protest, see Egypt and the March to Gaza a few days ago...
Free speech is a human right not a right of citizens. You conflate several issues here under the notion of national rights: legitimate border concerns, deportation of students as retaliation of free speech (under your umbrella term foreign protest), increasing authoritarianism in the US (which this is clearly evidence of). Nor should we take cues from governments suppressing protests against genocide. Genocide is something all people and all countries should unite against. It is a crime against humanity.
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>> Theil is spearheading a campaign of untold suffering to minorities and poor people.
> Can you at least give an example for your assertion?
Intelligence is needed to bring harm to adversaries. Determine the intel, determine the adversary.
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Thiel himself is part of a "protected class". If I was a standard consumer/ believer of leftist news publications wouldn't it be the time to defend him and say the reason he's being attacked is because he's a homosexual? If not, why should I believe it any other time they toss that accusation around?
Maybe you should consider this evidence that gay people aren't a "protected class" in the first place.
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"Leftist", "Rightist", and much "news" in general rots your brain by promulgating broken paradigms. This applies regardless of whether you think of yourself as supporting or opposing any given narrative.
You're twisting your thinking in knots acting like the authority claimed by some news, then contradicting itself, creates authority to the contrary. Really you're just helping spread brain rot.
Absurd. It's literally impossible, by definition, for gay white males to enact racist policy or otherwise act in ways harmful to minorities. "Gay" and "racist" are mutually exclusive terms, again by definition.
I categorically do not wish to live in a West perverted by Thiel and Karp’s grotesque ideology.
So far, the signs are that Trump is likely a worse steward than Xi. He just hasn't had the ability to properly fulfill his wishes.
Its funny how trump is actually helping China long term to become top superpower. He either can't see long term consequences of his emotional tantrums or simply doesn't care in the name of ego polishing games.
That's a bit of a strawman argument, no? The options are not only become a tyrant or let Putin rule the world. There's many and more clever options. I think we can demand much better from the people in power.
Also, that rhetoric of The West vs the world is a bit lazy. Things are more complex, even recent events prove The West is not a unified block where everyone thinks the same way.
What power, specifically? Overwhelming surveillance of citizens? Whining that people attending universities in the US protested things?
Why on earth would anyone think Khomeini (who, of course, has been dead for 24 years) would ever have any say over the West?
You’re deeply afraid of a very strange bogeyman. It seems odd to pretend that Peter Thiel also fears dead men in politically/economically/socially irrelevant countries.
...Khamenei is not Khomeini
Parent had Khomeini when I replied.
Khameini, of course, also has absolutely nothing to do with anything and is a nonsensical bogeyman. He just happens to still be alive.
> Do you really think Putin, Xi and Khomeini are better stewards of the world than the West?
I'm sure they're saying the same things about the West.
https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/002/355/607/670
Of course they say the same things about the West. Especially North Korea, which is the epitome of human achievement.
Saying it doesn't make it true though.
>North Korea
Maybe try addressing a more serious version of my argument rather than the weakest thing you can strawman.