So, Thiel has done an excellent job of cementing his reputation as a contrarian.<p>But I'd invite any startup founder to think long and hard about whether you'd want to be associated with him. I read this interview, like many others, and know that we wouldn't get along. So I'm not going to have him as an investor.<p>I could enumerate reasons why, but here's the bottom line: reflexive contrarianism is just nihilism. Beneath the contrarian tag, I don't see much of substance. And certainly nothing that resonates with me, or that I agree with.<p>Beyond a certain point, maybe after a certain age, you've got to actually stand for something, not just against things. I don't get any of that from this article, or from Thiel generally.
> I note that several Silicon Valley companies have pre-emptively said they will not help build a Muslim registry for the Trump administration. Will Palantir, the data-mining company of which Mr. Thiel was a founder, and whose clients include the N.S.A., the C.I.A. and the F.B.I., be involved in that? (Palantir’s C.E.O., Alex Karp, sat in at the Trump tech meeting.)<p>> “We would not do that,” Mr. Thiel says flatly.<p>Mr. Thiel, I don't believe you.
As someone from post-communist country, I find tone of the article a bit creepy. He has to 'explain himself' to whom? And for what?
We had single party system for 50 years, it did not worked out that well.<p>> <i>suggest that Mr. Thiel was not even a gay man, because he did not “embrace the struggle.”</i><p>Political preference is more important than sexual orientation, when deciding if someone is gay???? wtf?
><i>"When I remark that President Obama had eight years without any ethical shadiness, Mr. Thiel flips it, noting: “But there’s a point where no corruption can be a bad thing. It can mean that things are too boring.”</i><p>..... I literally don't even know what to say to that.<p>><i>"Mr. Thiel says: “On the one hand, the tape was clearly offensive and inappropriate. At the same time, I worry there’s a part of Silicon Valley that is hyper-politically correct about sex. One of my friends has a theory that the rest of the country tolerates Silicon Valley because people there just don’t have that much sex. They’re not having that much fun.”</i><p>People get upset due to a man claiming he can grab women's genitals because he has power and Thiel tries to write that off as "hyper-poltiically-correct"? It's not even a little "political correct". It's common god damn decency to call that behavior sexual assault.<p>So shameful.
Overlong article that says that Thiel went with Trump because Trump's "stock" was undervalued due to people opposed Trump's behavior and agenda, so Thiel saw a niche were he could get an edge due to lack of competition. Also some shots at Silicon Valley for having too much social principles (egalitarianism / political correctness) that clouds their business sense.<p>Plus some handwaving that everything bad or dangerous about Trump isn't a big deal.
Peter Thiel is a visionary. His scholarship fund accelerates kids lives into what they're passionate about instead of seeing them waste years in college.<p>He funds longevity, seasteading, and promotes people being definitive in their goals and working on things no one else is. He also personally funded the hunt for justice against an evil rag hiding behind genuine journalistic protections.<p>If you're on the wrong side of an issue from Peter Thiel, it's not because he's being reflexively contrarian, it's because he could write a 100 page thoughtful essay on why his position is better than any alternative.<p>The reason that Peter Thiel seems so contrarian is because so many other people are so cowardly. Shouldn't more billionaires be crushing bastards? Shouldn't more billionaires be funding medical research? Shouldn't more billionaires be publishing books to motivate the masses to create themselves the future that has been only dreamed of for the last few decades?<p>On the short list of people in this world who are doing a really really great job with what they have, Peter Thiel is at the top of my list.<p>Now the caveats. Violations of the 4th amendment suck, and if Palantir is part of them, it's not great. Trump is clearly not the best the business world had to offer. Christianity, not so fabulous.<p>I consider the man a legend and hope to see great things from him.
> If there’s no conflict of interest, it’s often because you’re just not interested.<p>The opposite of "interested" in "conflict of interest" is "disinterested", not "uninterested".
"On the other hand, I was totally convinced that there were W.M.D.s in Iraq in 2002, 2003" -- wow i now have even less respect for him. unless he is lying.
Thiel's responses communicated that he is beyond the point of no return with the trump problem. He can only say good things, almost like politician himself. Too bad.