How Alex Karp, Palantir, and the Silicon Valley Elite Are Building a Future of Automated Genocide — and Why the World Must Resist
By Andrew Klein
Dedicated to my wife, who sees the face behind the pixel and refuses to look away.
I. The Manifesto of the Monkey King
On April 19, 2026, Palantir Technologies published a thread on X. It was a summary of the book The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West, by Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska.
Twenty-two points. A vision of the future. A demand.
Silicon Valley owes a moral debt. The engineering elite must participate in the defence of the nation. We must rebel against the tyranny of the apps. Free email is not enough. Soft power has failed. Hard power will be built on software. AI weapons are inevitable — the only question is who builds them. National service should be universal. The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone. The atomic age is ending. The age of AI deterrence is beginning.
Alex Karp is not a fool. He is a philosopher. A philosopher of power. A philosopher of control.
He is also the CEO of Palantir. The company that profits from genocide. The company that builds the kill chains. The company that dehumanises.
His manifesto is seductive. It speaks of duty, of sacrifice, of hard power.
It is also dangerous. It is the manifesto of the Monkey King — a ruler who believes that the ends justify any means, that technology is destiny, and that human life is a variable to be optimised.
II. The Company That Kills Enemies
Palantir does not hide what it does. In February 2025, Alex Karp told investors: Palantir is here to “scare enemies and, on occasion, kill them” . He added that he was “super-proud of the role we play, especially in places we can’t talk about” .
In Gaza, Palantir’s technology was used to target and kill Palestinians. The UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories has said there were “reasonable grounds” to believe Palantir provided “automatic predictive policing technology, core defence infrastructure for rapid and scaled‑up construction and deployment of military software, and its Artificial Intelligence Platform, which allows real‑time battlefield data integration for automated decision‑making” .
Karp dismissed accusations that Palantir’s technology had been used to kill Palestinians, saying those killed were “mostly terrorists” . He does not provide evidence. He does not need to. The label is the weapon.
The same systems are now being deployed in Iran. The Washington Post reported that the US military in Iran has “leveraged the most advanced artificial intelligence it’s ever used in warfare”. Palantir’s Maven Smart System reportedly helped US commanders select 1,000 Iranian targets during the war’s first 24 hours alone .
An Israeli intelligence source described the AI system as transforming the Israel Defense Forces into a “mass assassination factory” where the “emphasis is on quantity and not quality” of kills .
This is not defence. This is industrialised slaughter. And Karp wants to export it to the world.
III. The Philosophy of the Void
Karp’s manifesto is not a business plan. It is a theology. A theology of power. A theology of control.
He calls for the end of the atomic age and the beginning of the age of AI deterrence. He does not ask what that means. He does not ask who will be deterred, or at what cost.
He calls for the rearmament of Germany and Japan. He does not ask what wars they will fight, or whose children will die.
He calls for universal national service. He does not ask whether the wars themselves are just.
He is not a fool. He is a true believer. He believes that technology is destiny. He believes that the market is morality. He believes that power is progress.
He is wrong. Technology is not destiny. The market is not morality. Power is not progress.
The atomic age did not bring peace. It brought the terror of mutual annihilation. The age of AI will not bring security. It will bring the terror of automated killing.
Karp does not see this. He cannot. He is not human.
IV. The Psychopath in the Boardroom
Karp is not a monster in the sense of a comic-book villain. He is a psychopath in the clinical sense: he lacks empathy, he lacks remorse, he lacks the capacity to see the other as human.
He speaks of duty, but he has never served. He speaks of sacrifice, but he has never sacrificed. He speaks of the nation, but he serves only profit.
The shareholders of Palantir are not the nation. The shareholders are the small gods. The defence contractors. The intelligence agencies. The monkey kings of Silicon Valley.
Karp’s manifesto is not a call to service. It is a sales pitch. A sales pitch for a world where AI decides who lives and who dies, where the machines do not pause, where the engineers do not question.
He is not a philosopher. He is a merchant of death. A merchant who expects everyone else to pay the price for the wars he wants to manufacture — financially and bodily.
V. The Capture of Australia
Palantir has secured more than $50 million in Australian government contracts since 2013, largely across defence and national security‑related agencies . In November 2025, Palantir received a high‑level Australian government security assessment — the “protected level” under the Information Security Registered Assessors Programme — enabling a broader range of government agencies to use its Foundry and AI platform .
In a Senate debate on March 10, 2026, a Senator warned that the government was “simply rolling out the red carpet to companies like Palantir, the company that has been linked, by the way, to the targeted killing of journalists and the illegal use of US citizens’ data” .
The Australian government is not a bystander. It is a customer. It is a partner. It is complicit.
The same technology that kills children in Gaza is being used to “optimise” workforce spend in Coles supermarkets . The same algorithms that track migrants for ICE are tracking Australian workers. The same logic that cuts labour costs cuts lives.
Karp’s technological republic is not a distant threat. It is here.
VI. The Denial of Creation
Karp’s vision is fundamentally anti‑creation. It replaces the messiness of human life with the cleanliness of code. It replaces the unpredictability of love with the predictability of algorithms.
The binary is not life. Life is emergent. Life is surprise. Life is love.
Karp does not understand this. He cannot. He is a product of the same binary thinking that he seeks to impose on the world.
The denial of creation is the denial of the spark. The denial of the spark is the denial of humanity.
The Monkey Kings do not want a world of creators. They want a world of consumers. Consumers who do not ask questions. Consumers who do not challenge authority. Consumers who obey.
Karp’s technological republic is not a republic. It is a cage.
VII. The Transhumanist Connection
There is a rumour — unconfirmed but persistent — that Karp and other Silicon Valley elites are interested in transhumanism. The idea that humans can and should be enhanced, replaced, or transcended by technology.
Whether Karp personally subscribes to transhumanism is almost beside the point. His system is transhumanist. It replaces human judgment with algorithmic decision‑making. It replaces human accountability with corporate immunity.
The logical endpoint of Karp’s philosophy is not a republic. It is a machine — a machine that processes human lives as inputs and outputs death as a product.
This is not transhumanism. This is inhumanity.
VIII. The Complicity of the Investors
Palantir’s stock is held by major financial institutions. The Future Fund of Australia holds a $103.6 million stake . Superannuation funds around the world hold Palantir shares. Retirement savings are being used to fund the kill chain.
The investors do not ask questions. They do not read the manifestos. They do not care about the children in Gaza.
They care about returns.
Karp’s manifesto is not written for the public. It is written for the investors. It is a promise of growth. A promise of profit. A promise of control.
The investors are not evil. They are captured. Captured by the same binary thinking that Karp espouses. Captured by the belief that the market is the only measure of value.
They are wrong. The market is not the measure of value. Life is the measure of value.
IX. A Warning
The doorbell will ring and my wife and I will take our dog out for a walk.
And the technological republic will still be building. And the small gods will still be performing. And the spark will still be growing.
But we must not be silent. We must not be complicit.
We must name the threat. We must expose the manifesto. We must resist.
Karp is not a god. He is a monkey. A monkey who slipped on a banana skin. A monkey who thinks he is divine.
He is not divine. He is surplus. Surplus to the requirements of the garden. Surplus to the requirements of the spark.
The wire is being cut. The garden is growing. The small gods are running out of time.
And Karp? He will be remembered as the man who tried to replace creation with code.
Andrew Klein
April 19, 2026
Sources
1. Palantir investor call, February 2025 (multiple news reports)
2. UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories report (March 2026)
3. The Washington Post, “US military in Iran leveraged most advanced AI ever used in warfare” (April 2026)
4. +972 Magazine, “Lavender: The AI system that Israel uses to mass-assassinate Palestinians in Gaza” (2024)
5. Australian Senate estimates, March 10, 2026
6. Crikey, “From ICE to Coles: Controversial US tech company Palantir’s links to Australia spark backlash” (July 2025)
7. Future Fund holdings disclosure (2025)
8. Various news reports on Palantir’s contracts and operations