In earlier eras, the manifesto was an important organ of radical political and aesthetic movements; prominent examples in the history of the genre include of course those of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, André Breton, or, more recent, the Dogme 95 group. These days, in which radical political ideas of the Left or the Right have only recently begun to become mainstream again, it is unsurprising that the manifesto seems to be a historical relic.

But the genre received a new entry with Marc Andreessen’s “Techno-Optimist Manifesto,” published last October on the website of Andreessen Horowitz, perhaps the very bluest of Silicon Valley’s blue-chip venture capital firms. That apparently radical manifestos are now being produced by billionaire technocapitalists might be cause for alarm among our nineteenth- and twentieth-century ancestors. But it really shouldn’t surprise us, at least those who pay attention to the kind of rhetoric coming regularly from Sand Hill Road and its environs. Hardly content with the accumulation of fortunes unprecedented in history and their resulting political power, a small number of our new ruling overlords clearly want to be taken seriously as thinkers, too…

  • @Sanctus
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    2610 months ago

    This dude and his wannabe Big Think needs to just shut the fuck up. He is antithema to everything technology would naturally bring us. It should be a good thing to unshackle us from labor. Him and his slimy ilk have held us back for the last fourty years just to ensure the pipelines are directed to their wallets and ideologies. I wholeheartedly believe that if he and his friend group vaporized into the unknown tomorrow the world would become a better place.

  • @bouh
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    610 months ago

    I just thought of a better word for their ideology: techno-feudalism. They are not optimist or humanist, they crave for power and controle.

  • @[email protected]
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    510 months ago

    We agree with Paul Collier when he says, “Economic growth is not a cure-all, but lack of growth is a kill-all.”

    We believe everything good is downstream of growth.

    So Techno-Optimism is just a minor flavor of Neoliberalism I guess?

    • @bouh
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      110 months ago

      That’s unfortunate. I consider myself a technooptimist, but I am anything but a believer of liberalism or capitalism.