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Palantir manifesto: Silicon Valley’s moral debt, draft revival and AI weapon push
US Politics

Palantir manifesto: Silicon Valley’s moral debt, draft revival and AI weapon push

Photography & Words by Eleanor Cross April 22, 2026 2 MIN READ
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Palantir released a 22‑point

Palantir manifesto

over the weekend, distilling ideas from CEO Alex Karp’s book Technological Republic. The X post, which has amassed ↑ 32 million views, argues that Silicon Valley carries a moral debt to the United States that birthed its tech boom.

Palantir manifesto on draft and AI

It blames the sector’s focus on consumer apps for neglecting the defense ecosystem that underwrites America’s geopolitical edge. The manifesto calls for reinstating the draft, shifting AI research toward weapons, and labeling certain foreign cultures as “regressive and harmful.”

“Why risk the moral morass of geopolitics when you can build another app?”

Karp and corporate‑affairs chief Nicholas Zamiska claim the U.S.–private partnership that funded rockets, satellites and drugs is fading, leaving a generation of elites to outsource war to professional soldiers. They cite the post‑World War II disarmament of Germany as an “over‑correction” that paved the way for Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, and argue Japan’s pacifist charter has outlived its usefulness. Domestically, the authors urge higher pay for doctors, teachers and civil servants to attract top talent, warning that treating them as “priests” erodes public service quality. The most controversial passage brands some cultures as “middling, regressive and harmful,” and urges a renewed shared American culture to preserve national cohesion. Critics note Palantir’s deep ties to ICE, including a recent ↑ $30 million no‑bid contract for an AI deportation platform. Karp, a self‑identified Democrat with a Ph.D. from Goethe University, describes himself as an “immigration skeptic.” The manifesto arrives as Congress tightens oversight of tech‑enabled immigration enforcement and as Reuters reports rising bipartisan scrutiny. Whether the blunt stance will boost or blunt Palantir’s government pipeline remains uncertain, especially as the nuclear debate reshapes defense spending priorities.

Intel provided by: Eleanor Cross
Chief Washington Correspondent
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