Tautalus
Regular Member
- Messages
- 545
- Reaction score
- 1,380
- Points
- 93
- Ethnic group
- Portuguese
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- I2-M223 / I-FTB15368
- mtDNA haplogroup
- H6a1b2y
There is a diffuse hidden ideological framework underpinning the Trump administration. The ideological chaos of his administration is influenced by a network of extremists pushing anti-democratic, elitist philosophies that reject equality and democracy as impediments to progress.
The body of ideas grouped under the labels of the Dark Enlightenment, neo-reaction, and accelerationism represents a complex and often opaque intellectual current that has moved from obscure philosophical circles into parts of contemporary American political, technological, and cultural life. Although there is no unified conspiracy or centralised doctrine, what exists instead is a network of thinkers, entrepreneurs, and political actors connected by overlapping critiques of democracy, humanism, and Enlightenment values, and by a shared openness to alternative forms of governance grounded in hierarchy, technology, and elite control.
The Dark Enlightenment in the United States is best understood as a diffuse network of influence rather than a formal movement, structured around varying degrees of proximity to its core ideas. At the philosophical core of this constellation stand figures such as Nick Land and Curtis Yarvin. They propose that the Enlightenment’s philosophy, humanism, democracy, and quest for equality are responsible for the decay of Western Civilization.
They explicitly articulate a critique of liberal democracy and advance alternative models based on hierarchy, centralised authority, and in Yarvin’s case, the idea of a “CEO-style” state. Land, originally associated with the Cybernetic Cultural Research Unit at the University of Warwick, developed a radical version of accelerationism, arguing that capitalism and technological systems should be intensified rather than restrained, ultimately dissolving human-centered political frameworks. His thought, influenced by figures such as Georges Bataille and Aleister Crowley, extends beyond conventional political theory into speculative and sometimes occult territory, incorporating ideas like hyperstition and self-fulfilling technological futures. Yarvin, by contrast, translates similar anti-democratic intuitions into a more concrete political vision. Writing under the pseudonym Mencius Moldbug, he argues that democracy is inherently inefficient and unstable, proposing instead a system he describes as “neocameralism”, in which the state operates like a corporation governed by a CEO-like sovereign. His concepts, including the critique of institutional power networks he calls “the Cathedral” and proposals such as the RAGE program, “Retire All Government Employees”, illustrate a desire for a radical restructuring, or even dismantling, of existing democratic institutions.
For the proponents of the movement democracy is flawed because it gives equal voting power to everyone, regardless of ability, society should be more hierarchical, with greater influence given to “high-IQ” individuals, and we can easily imagine who they are, and policies should prioritise efficiency and competence over equality.
These ideas are not confined to theory. They have found resonance within segments of Silicon Valley and the broader technological elite, where scepticism toward democratic processes often aligns with a preference for efficiency, innovation, and centralised decision-making. Figures such as Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, and Elon Musk are not strict adherents of neo-reactionary ideology, but they occupy a position of partial adoption and amplification. Thiel, in particular, has expressed admiration for Yarvin’s critiques and has financially supported political actors connected to these ideas, including J. D. Vance. Andreessen has articulated views about the limitations of democratic governance that echo Yarvin’s arguments, while Musk’s involvement in artificial intelligence and infrastructure development places him within a broader techno-political landscape where questions of control, optimisation, and post-human futures are increasingly salient.
Technology, especially artificial intelligence, plays a central role in this ideological ecosystem. For accelerationist thinkers, AI is not merely a tool but a transformative force capable of reshaping or even replacing traditional governance structures. Developments such as neural computing systems, large-scale data analytics, and predictive algorithms point toward a model of governance based less on deliberation and more on calculation and control. Companies like Palantir, co-founded by Thiel, exemplify this trend by aggregating vast quantities of data to enable surveillance, predictive profiling, and decision-making at scale. These developments raise significant concerns about privacy, autonomy, and the concentration of power, particularly when integrated with state functions or national security infrastructures.
In the political sphere, these ideas are translated into more practical and rhetorically accessible forms. Figures such as J. D. Vance, Steve Bannon and Michael Anton engage with themes that resonate with neo-reactionary thought, including distrust of bureaucratic institutions, calls for strong executive authority, and critiques of liberal democratic norms. While they do not advocate explicitly for corporate monarchy, their discourse often reflects a shared scepticism toward the legitimacy and effectiveness of existing systems. This influence has been observed in broader political movements and policy agendas, where ideas about reducing the size of government, restructuring bureaucracies, or concentrating power in executive leadership echo aspects of Yarvin’s proposals. We can see their direct influence in programs like DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency).
When distrust of institutions becomes central, politics shifts from a competition over policies to a conflict over the legitimacy of the system itself. This can intensify polarisation, justify exceptional measures, and weaken norms that previously constrained power. Even without explicit rejection of democracy, the cumulative effect can be a system that functions more erratically, with higher stakes and fewer shared rules.
The ideological framework underpinning these developments is reinforced by a broader critique of Enlightenment values. Traditional commitments to equality, universal rights, and participatory governance are seen by these thinkers as outdated or counterproductive in a world increasingly shaped by complex technological systems. Accelerationism, in both its left and right-wing variants, challenges the humanist assumption that individuals are the central agents of political life, instead emphasising the role of impersonal forces such as markets, algorithms, and networks.
Right-wing accelerationists, including Land and Yarvin, envision a future in which democratic institutions are replaced by hierarchical or technocratic systems, while techno-optimists such as Ray Kurzweil anticipate a post-human transformation driven by artificial intelligence and technological augmentation.
These ideas also intersect with broader global narratives about governance and the future of society. Discussions associated with various institutions, like the World Economic Forum, reflect a growing interest in AI-driven governance and the potential obsolescence of traditional political structures. Although these perspectives differ significantly in their normative commitments, they converge on the recognition that technological change is reshaping the conditions under which political authority operates. This convergence creates a paradoxical situation in which both critics and defenders of liberal democracy acknowledge its limitations, even as they propose radically different alternatives.
The Dark Enlightenment does not directly shape U.S.–EU relations in the sense of determining foreign policy, but it plays a subtler role, it helps frame how certain influential actors interpret and oppose the European Union as a political model. Its influence is therefore indirect, operating at the level of ideas, narratives, and elite discourse, rather than formal diplomacy.
At its core, the European Union represents one of the most advanced realisations of Enlightenment political ideals: supranational governance, rule-based legitimacy, technocratic administration, and a commitment to universal norms such as human rights and legal equality. Is a post-national extension of democratic legitimacy, an institutional attempt to ground authority in law, procedure, and rational cooperation across borders.
This is precisely the kind of system that thinkers like Curtis Yarvin and Nick Land are predisposed to reject. From their perspective, the EU exemplifies everything they see as problematic in modern governance: diffuse authority, bureaucratic complexity, weak accountability, and a reliance on abstract universal principles rather than concrete power or cultural cohesion.
In the political sphere, this critique aligns with currents that emphasise national sovereignty and scepticism toward international institutions. Figures such as Steve Bannon have explicitly supported European nationalist movements that oppose EU integration, framing the Union as an undemocratic elite project.
The consequences of these developments are profound. As ideas associated with the Dark Enlightenment and related movements circulate among influential actors, they contribute to a gradual shift in how legitimacy is understood. Democratic participation and public deliberation may be increasingly viewed as inefficient or even obstructive, while centralised authority and technocratic management gain appeal. This shift risks eroding trust in institutions, concentrating power in the hands of elites, and weakening the normative foundations of democratic governance. At the same time, the integration of advanced technologies into political and economic systems introduces new forms of control and surveillance, raising questions about the future of autonomy and accountability.
In this context, the contemporary political landscape can be seen as a field of tension between competing models of legitimacy. The Enlightenment ideal, grounded in reason, universality, and consent, persists but is increasingly challenged by alternative logics based on performance, identity, and technological control. The result is not a clear transition from one system to another, but a hybrid and unstable configuration in which elements of democracy, technocracy, and hierarchy coexist and compete.
Ultimately, the significance of the Dark Enlightenment lies in its role as a conceptual catalyst. By articulating a radical critique of democracy and humanism, it provides a language through which existing frustrations with governance, technology, and social order can be expressed and amplified. Its influence is most visible not in explicit declarations, but in subtle shifts in discourse, policy, and institutional design. Understanding this network of ideas and actors is therefore essential for interpreting the evolving relationship between politics, technology, and power in the twenty-first century, and for assessing the future trajectory of democratic societies.
The video is oversimplified, but it presents the basics in a short amount of time.
A humanist critique :
The body of ideas grouped under the labels of the Dark Enlightenment, neo-reaction, and accelerationism represents a complex and often opaque intellectual current that has moved from obscure philosophical circles into parts of contemporary American political, technological, and cultural life. Although there is no unified conspiracy or centralised doctrine, what exists instead is a network of thinkers, entrepreneurs, and political actors connected by overlapping critiques of democracy, humanism, and Enlightenment values, and by a shared openness to alternative forms of governance grounded in hierarchy, technology, and elite control.
The Dark Enlightenment in the United States is best understood as a diffuse network of influence rather than a formal movement, structured around varying degrees of proximity to its core ideas. At the philosophical core of this constellation stand figures such as Nick Land and Curtis Yarvin. They propose that the Enlightenment’s philosophy, humanism, democracy, and quest for equality are responsible for the decay of Western Civilization.
They explicitly articulate a critique of liberal democracy and advance alternative models based on hierarchy, centralised authority, and in Yarvin’s case, the idea of a “CEO-style” state. Land, originally associated with the Cybernetic Cultural Research Unit at the University of Warwick, developed a radical version of accelerationism, arguing that capitalism and technological systems should be intensified rather than restrained, ultimately dissolving human-centered political frameworks. His thought, influenced by figures such as Georges Bataille and Aleister Crowley, extends beyond conventional political theory into speculative and sometimes occult territory, incorporating ideas like hyperstition and self-fulfilling technological futures. Yarvin, by contrast, translates similar anti-democratic intuitions into a more concrete political vision. Writing under the pseudonym Mencius Moldbug, he argues that democracy is inherently inefficient and unstable, proposing instead a system he describes as “neocameralism”, in which the state operates like a corporation governed by a CEO-like sovereign. His concepts, including the critique of institutional power networks he calls “the Cathedral” and proposals such as the RAGE program, “Retire All Government Employees”, illustrate a desire for a radical restructuring, or even dismantling, of existing democratic institutions.
For the proponents of the movement democracy is flawed because it gives equal voting power to everyone, regardless of ability, society should be more hierarchical, with greater influence given to “high-IQ” individuals, and we can easily imagine who they are, and policies should prioritise efficiency and competence over equality.
These ideas are not confined to theory. They have found resonance within segments of Silicon Valley and the broader technological elite, where scepticism toward democratic processes often aligns with a preference for efficiency, innovation, and centralised decision-making. Figures such as Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, and Elon Musk are not strict adherents of neo-reactionary ideology, but they occupy a position of partial adoption and amplification. Thiel, in particular, has expressed admiration for Yarvin’s critiques and has financially supported political actors connected to these ideas, including J. D. Vance. Andreessen has articulated views about the limitations of democratic governance that echo Yarvin’s arguments, while Musk’s involvement in artificial intelligence and infrastructure development places him within a broader techno-political landscape where questions of control, optimisation, and post-human futures are increasingly salient.
Technology, especially artificial intelligence, plays a central role in this ideological ecosystem. For accelerationist thinkers, AI is not merely a tool but a transformative force capable of reshaping or even replacing traditional governance structures. Developments such as neural computing systems, large-scale data analytics, and predictive algorithms point toward a model of governance based less on deliberation and more on calculation and control. Companies like Palantir, co-founded by Thiel, exemplify this trend by aggregating vast quantities of data to enable surveillance, predictive profiling, and decision-making at scale. These developments raise significant concerns about privacy, autonomy, and the concentration of power, particularly when integrated with state functions or national security infrastructures.
In the political sphere, these ideas are translated into more practical and rhetorically accessible forms. Figures such as J. D. Vance, Steve Bannon and Michael Anton engage with themes that resonate with neo-reactionary thought, including distrust of bureaucratic institutions, calls for strong executive authority, and critiques of liberal democratic norms. While they do not advocate explicitly for corporate monarchy, their discourse often reflects a shared scepticism toward the legitimacy and effectiveness of existing systems. This influence has been observed in broader political movements and policy agendas, where ideas about reducing the size of government, restructuring bureaucracies, or concentrating power in executive leadership echo aspects of Yarvin’s proposals. We can see their direct influence in programs like DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency).
When distrust of institutions becomes central, politics shifts from a competition over policies to a conflict over the legitimacy of the system itself. This can intensify polarisation, justify exceptional measures, and weaken norms that previously constrained power. Even without explicit rejection of democracy, the cumulative effect can be a system that functions more erratically, with higher stakes and fewer shared rules.
The ideological framework underpinning these developments is reinforced by a broader critique of Enlightenment values. Traditional commitments to equality, universal rights, and participatory governance are seen by these thinkers as outdated or counterproductive in a world increasingly shaped by complex technological systems. Accelerationism, in both its left and right-wing variants, challenges the humanist assumption that individuals are the central agents of political life, instead emphasising the role of impersonal forces such as markets, algorithms, and networks.
Right-wing accelerationists, including Land and Yarvin, envision a future in which democratic institutions are replaced by hierarchical or technocratic systems, while techno-optimists such as Ray Kurzweil anticipate a post-human transformation driven by artificial intelligence and technological augmentation.
These ideas also intersect with broader global narratives about governance and the future of society. Discussions associated with various institutions, like the World Economic Forum, reflect a growing interest in AI-driven governance and the potential obsolescence of traditional political structures. Although these perspectives differ significantly in their normative commitments, they converge on the recognition that technological change is reshaping the conditions under which political authority operates. This convergence creates a paradoxical situation in which both critics and defenders of liberal democracy acknowledge its limitations, even as they propose radically different alternatives.
The Dark Enlightenment does not directly shape U.S.–EU relations in the sense of determining foreign policy, but it plays a subtler role, it helps frame how certain influential actors interpret and oppose the European Union as a political model. Its influence is therefore indirect, operating at the level of ideas, narratives, and elite discourse, rather than formal diplomacy.
At its core, the European Union represents one of the most advanced realisations of Enlightenment political ideals: supranational governance, rule-based legitimacy, technocratic administration, and a commitment to universal norms such as human rights and legal equality. Is a post-national extension of democratic legitimacy, an institutional attempt to ground authority in law, procedure, and rational cooperation across borders.
This is precisely the kind of system that thinkers like Curtis Yarvin and Nick Land are predisposed to reject. From their perspective, the EU exemplifies everything they see as problematic in modern governance: diffuse authority, bureaucratic complexity, weak accountability, and a reliance on abstract universal principles rather than concrete power or cultural cohesion.
In the political sphere, this critique aligns with currents that emphasise national sovereignty and scepticism toward international institutions. Figures such as Steve Bannon have explicitly supported European nationalist movements that oppose EU integration, framing the Union as an undemocratic elite project.
The consequences of these developments are profound. As ideas associated with the Dark Enlightenment and related movements circulate among influential actors, they contribute to a gradual shift in how legitimacy is understood. Democratic participation and public deliberation may be increasingly viewed as inefficient or even obstructive, while centralised authority and technocratic management gain appeal. This shift risks eroding trust in institutions, concentrating power in the hands of elites, and weakening the normative foundations of democratic governance. At the same time, the integration of advanced technologies into political and economic systems introduces new forms of control and surveillance, raising questions about the future of autonomy and accountability.
In this context, the contemporary political landscape can be seen as a field of tension between competing models of legitimacy. The Enlightenment ideal, grounded in reason, universality, and consent, persists but is increasingly challenged by alternative logics based on performance, identity, and technological control. The result is not a clear transition from one system to another, but a hybrid and unstable configuration in which elements of democracy, technocracy, and hierarchy coexist and compete.
Ultimately, the significance of the Dark Enlightenment lies in its role as a conceptual catalyst. By articulating a radical critique of democracy and humanism, it provides a language through which existing frustrations with governance, technology, and social order can be expressed and amplified. Its influence is most visible not in explicit declarations, but in subtle shifts in discourse, policy, and institutional design. Understanding this network of ideas and actors is therefore essential for interpreting the evolving relationship between politics, technology, and power in the twenty-first century, and for assessing the future trajectory of democratic societies.
The video is oversimplified, but it presents the basics in a short amount of time.
A humanist critique :
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The Dark Enlightenment and the end of democracy: a humanist critique
By William van ZwanenbergThe Dark Enlightenment is not simply an intellectual fad. It is a serious threat to democratic ethics and humanist values. It is being trialled—not as theory, but as practice—by some of the most powerful people on Earth. It must be resisted. William is a strategist...www.humanisticallyspeaking.org