| The Techno-Optimist Manifesto 
 by Marc Andreessen
 
 The Enemy
 
 We have enemies.
 
 Our enemies are not bad people – but rather bad ideas.
 
 Our   present society has been subjected to a mass demoralization campaign   for six decades – against technology and against life – under varying   names like “existential risk”, “sustainability”, “ESG”, “Sustainable   Development Goals”, “social responsibility”, “stakeholder capitalism”,   “Precautionary Principle”, “trust and safety”, “tech ethics”, “risk   management”, “de-growth”, “the limits of growth”.
 
 This   demoralization campaign is based on bad ideas of the past – zombie   ideas, many derived from Communism, disastrous then and now – that have   refused to die.
 
 Our enemy is stagnation.
 
 Our enemy is anti-merit, anti-ambition, anti-striving, anti-achievement, anti-greatness.
 
 Our enemy is statism, authoritarianism, collectivism, central planning, socialism.
 
 Our enemy is bureaucracy, vetocracy, gerontocracy, blind deference to tradition.
 
 Our enemy is corruption, regulatory capture, monopolies, cartels.
 
 Our   enemy is institutions that in their youth were vital and energetic and   truth-seeking, but are now compromised and corroded and collapsing –   blocking progress in increasingly desperate bids for continued   relevance, frantically trying to justify their ongoing funding despite   spiraling dysfunction and escalating ineptness.
 
 Our enemy is the   ivory tower, the know-it-all credentialed expert worldview, indulging  in  abstract theories, luxury beliefs, social engineering, disconnected   from the real world, delusional, unelected, and unaccountable – playing   God with everyone else’s lives, with total insulation from the   consequences.
 
 Our enemy is speech control and thought control –   the increasing use, in plain sight, of George Orwell’s “1984” as an   instruction manual.
 
 Our enemy is Thomas Sowell’s Unconstrained Vision, Alexander Kojeve’s Universal and Homogeneous State, Thomas More’s Utopia.
 
 Our   enemy is the Precautionary Principle, which would have prevented   virtually all progress since man first harnessed fire. The Precautionary   Principle was invented to prevent the large-scale deployment of   civilian nuclear power, perhaps the most catastrophic mistake in Western   society in my lifetime. The Precautionary Principle continues to   inflict enormous unnecessary suffering on our world today. It is deeply   immoral, and we must jettison it with extreme prejudice.
 
 Our   enemy is deceleration, de-growth, depopulation – the nihilistic wish, so   trendy among our elites, for fewer people, less energy, and more   suffering and death.
 
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 a16z.com
 
 Tom
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