Peter Thiel (b. 1967) reads René Girard (1923-2015) as a young man at Stanford and never stops. Girard teaches him that human desire copies other desire, that crowds form by scapegoating, and that imitation drives men toward the same prizes and then toward mutual destruction. Thiel takes the lesson and inverts it into a competitive doctrine. Competition is for losers. The mimetic crowd chases the same things and grinds its returns to zero. The winner escapes the crowd, builds a monopoly, and stands alone. That single idea organizes the set around him.
The inner ring comes from PayPal and the Stanford Review. David Sacks (b. 1972), Keith Rabois (b. 1969), Ken Howery (b. 1975), Joe Lonsdale (b. 1982), and on the periphery Elon Musk (b. 1971). They met young, fought a media war in college over speech codes and diversity orthodoxy, then made a fortune together. Sacks and Thiel wrote The Diversity Myth, a 1998 polemic against the early-1990s campus regime. The book is a founding text for the set. It tells you what they oppose before it tells you what they want. The bond is loyalty forged in a shared enemy, and the set keeps recruiting the same way, by ideological combat that produces trust.
What they value first is escape. Escape from the average, from the consensus, from the median return, from the median opinion. They prize the contrarian who is right when everyone else is wrong. Thiel’s interview question, what important truth do very few people agree with you on, is the entry exam. The man who can answer it well has a soul they recognize. The man who cannot is a conformist, and conformity is the cardinal sin. They value founders over managers, builders over rentiers, the zero-to-one creator over the one-to-n copyist. They value technology as the engine of growth and read stagnation as a civilizational emergency. We were promised flying cars and got 140 characters. That line carries their grief and their program.
Their hero is the founder-king. Not the committee, not the institution, not the elected board, but the single visionary man who sees what others cannot and bends the world to it. They admire the figure who concentrates power and refuses to apologize for it. Thiel advised Mark Zuckerberg (b. 1984) to lock up control of Facebook. Founder control is doctrine, because the crowd dilutes vision and the founder protects it. The hero suffers persecution from the herd, the press, and the regulators, and his suffering confirms his election. Galileo before the Inquisition is the template. The set tells this story about itself constantly. We are the heretics. They want to silence us. History will vindicate us. Thiel’s secret funding of the lawsuit that destroyed Gawker fits the myth. The persecuted man strikes back and wins. That is the heroic arc they honor.
Status inside the set runs on a few currencies. The first is being early and right, the proven contrarian call cashed out in money or power. The second is founding something real, a company, a fund, a country charter, a movement. The third is producing the heterodox idea that travels. The fourth is proximity to Thiel himself, who functions as the kingmaker and the validator. He launched JD Vance (b. 1984) with money and introduction, backed Blake Masters (b. 1986), seeded a generation of founders through the Thiel Fellowship, which pays young men to drop out of college and build. Drop out of college is itself a status move against the credential. The fellowship says the degree is a tax on the talented and the real elite needs no permission slip. Mainstream prestige, the Harvard seat, the Times op-ed, the establishment award, earns you nothing here and may cost you. They invert the outside hierarchy. The credentialed insider is suspect. The exiled outsider with a hard idea ranks higher.
The set keeps intellectual outriders who supply theory. Curtis Yarvin (b. 1973), the neoreactionary writer, gives them the argument that democracy is a failed operating system and the country should be run like a startup under a CEO with real authority. Thiel wrote in 2009 that he no longer believes freedom and democracy are compatible, and the sentence still defines the edge of the set’s thinking. Balaji Srinivasan (b. 1980) supplies the network state, the idea that the future polity is a digital community that acquires territory, an exit from the nation rather than a reform of it. Exit over voice is the deep preference. When a system is captured, you do not vote to fix it, you leave and build a clean one. The seasteading dream, the charter city, the bunker in New Zealand, the Mars colony, all express the same instinct. The competent few withdraw from the decaying many and start again.
Now the normative claims. Stagnation is sin and growth is salvation, so the highest duty is to build and to remove whatever blocks building. Regulation, the administrative state, the risk-averse institution, the credentialing guild, these are the obstacles, and clearing them is righteous work. Greatness deserves freedom from the leveling crowd, so concentrated power in the right hands is good, not dangerous. They reject the egalitarian premise that outcomes should be flattened. They hold that a small number of exceptional men create almost everything of value and the rest mostly follow, so deference and resources should flow to the exceptional. Decline is real and the West is failing, so a recovery requires hard men willing to be hated. Comfort is a trap. Safety culture is decadence. The willingness to offend is a mark of seriousness.
The essentialist claims. Talent is rare, innate, and unevenly distributed, and you can spot it. Founders are a type, not a role, a kind of man with vision and will, and the type is mostly born not trained. The crowd is essentially mimetic, driven by copied desire and prone to scapegoating, which is why mass opinion deserves suspicion rather than respect. Institutions tend toward capture and sclerosis by their nature, so they cannot be trusted to reform and must be routed around. Markets and exit reveal truth while politics and voice obscure it. And there is a quasi-religious layer, strongest in Thiel, who reads the Antichrist and the Katechon, who frames technology and stagnation in apocalyptic and Christian terms, and who treats the present as a hinge where civilization either accelerates into greatness or slides into a managed, peaceful, mediocre death. Sacks and the more secular members carry the political and commercial version without the theology, but the shape holds. A few see the truth. The many resist it. The future belongs to the few who build and refuse to apologize.
The set preaches competition is for losers and monopoly is the prize, then preaches markets and exit as freedom, but a monopoly is the end of the market and concentrated founder power is the end of exit for everyone inside the company or the polity. The doctrine that frees the founder cancels the freedom of the followers. They resolve this by trusting the character of the right man, which is the oldest move in political theory and the least reliable. The Girardian who fears the scapegoating crowd has built a circle that scapegoats the conformist, the credentialed, the journalist, and the bureaucrat with real relish. The persecuted heretics now hold the Vice Presidency, the AI policy desk under David Sacks, and a billion dollars in Palantir contracts. Sacks serves as the White House AI and crypto czar, and Palantir has won large federal contracts, including a roughly one billion dollar Homeland Security agreement. The outsider myth survives the acquisition of insider power, because the myth was never about marginality. It was about a self-image of election that justifies whatever power the elect happen to hold.
Thiel is gay, married to Matt Danzeisen, who runs money inside Thiel’s operation. Keith Rabois is gay, married to Jacob Helberg (b. 1989), now Under Secretary of State, in a wedding Sam Altman (b. 1985) officiated. Around Thiel for years ran a coterie of beautiful young men, among them the model Jeff Thomas (1988-2023), who died in a fall in Miami. Vance swore Helberg in while Rabois stood beside him. So at the center and the near-center of a hard-right political formation you find a married gay founder-king and a married gay power couple holding real federal office.
This is a faction of the gay right that refuses the mainstream gay political identity. The dominant LGBT politics of the last forty years is egalitarian, therapeutic, group-based, and allied with the left. It asks for recognition, protection, and inclusion. The Thiel-set gay man rejects every part of that. He does not want to be a member of a protected class. He does not want his homosexuality to be his politics or his tribe. He treats it as a private fact about whom he loves and otherwise irrelevant to his standing, which he wants to earn as a builder, a contrarian, a founder. Helberg presents himself first as a China hawk and a patriot, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, a man of the new American century, and only incidentally as gay. He was raised in a Jewish home in Paris and frames belonging in national rather than identity terms. Rabois has spent years attacking the diversity regime that the gay left helped build. The Diversity Myth, written by two of the set’s founders, is partly an attack on the very identity politics that the mainstream gay movement runs on. So you get the spectacle of gay men funding and staffing a movement the gay establishment regards as the enemy.
This fits the hero system rather than straining against it. The set worships the exceptional individual who escapes the crowd, and the gay members live that story twice. Once as founders, once as men who refused the script their own demographic handed them. The contrarian who is right when his tribe is wrong is the highest type here, and the gay Thielite is contrarian against his tribe by definition. His sexuality, far from a liability, becomes proof of independence. He is nobody’s token. He owes the LGBT movement nothing and says so. That posture buys status inside the set, because the set prizes the man who walks away from the obvious coalition and bets on himself.
A homoerotic and homosocial charge sits inside founder-worship, the cult of the exceptional young man, the mentor and the protégé, the circle of brilliant males bound by loyalty and rivalry. Thiel funds young men, surrounds himself with them, elevates them, marries into the network. The Thiel Fellowship, the protégé chain from PayPal forward, the kingmaking of Vance and Masters, all of it has the shape of an older male erotics of mentorship and succession, the master and the gifted youth, whatever the sexual facts in any given case. Most of the protégés are straight. The pattern of devotion and elevation is homosocial regardless. The set venerates a certain kind of beautiful, brilliant, willful young man, and that veneration is part of its energy.
The gay Thielite holds that sexuality is private and apolitical, that it confers no group claim and no moral standing, and that the man who builds his identity around it has surrendered to the mimetic crowd he should despise. He holds that masculinity, hierarchy, and excellence are real and good, and that the therapeutic, victim-centered LGBT politics is a form of the leveling weakness the whole set opposes. He treats his own homosexuality the way the set treats everything, as raw material for an individual life rather than a ticket into a coalition. The essentialist claim underneath is the set’s master claim applied to himself. A few exceptional men see clearly and build, the many follow scripts, and being gay does not change which kind of man you are.
The set allies with a religious right that still regards homosexuality as sin and is working to roll back its public legitimacy, and the gay members serve that alliance while exempting themselves from its sexual morality. They resolve the strain the way they resolve the monopoly-versus-markets strain, by exception. The rule is for the crowd. The exceptional man writes his own. Helberg can serve an administration courting Christian-nationalist sentiment because he does not experience himself as a member of the class that politics targets. He is an individual, an exception, a builder. Whether the alliance returns the favor and keeps treating him as an exception is the open question.
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