
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


I.
In my 2019 post Too Much Dark Money In Almonds, I asked: why is there so little money in politics?
During the 2018 election, Americans - candidates, parties, PACs, and small donors like you - spent a combined $5 billion pushing their preferred candidates. Although that sounds like a lot of money, Americans spent $12 billion on almonds that same year. Why the imbalance? The oil industry has strong political opinions, and they make $500 billion per year. Do they really think electing oil-friendly politicians isn't worth 2% of revenue?
We debated how this could be. Some of the discussion proved prescient - I asked if maybe Elon Musk should buy some kind of social media property. But we never found a good answer, and the implied question remained open: if some billionaire wanted to spend an actually relevant percent of his net worth on politics, could he just take over everything?
I recently talked to some Silicon Valley political consultants who updated me on the status of this issue: Marc Andreessen tried this in 2024 and it basically worked. Now he is trying it a second time, it will probably work again, and Marc Andreessen will probably own every politician twice over.
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/tech-pacs-are-closing-in-on-the-almonds
By Jeremiah4.8
129129 ratings
I.
In my 2019 post Too Much Dark Money In Almonds, I asked: why is there so little money in politics?
During the 2018 election, Americans - candidates, parties, PACs, and small donors like you - spent a combined $5 billion pushing their preferred candidates. Although that sounds like a lot of money, Americans spent $12 billion on almonds that same year. Why the imbalance? The oil industry has strong political opinions, and they make $500 billion per year. Do they really think electing oil-friendly politicians isn't worth 2% of revenue?
We debated how this could be. Some of the discussion proved prescient - I asked if maybe Elon Musk should buy some kind of social media property. But we never found a good answer, and the implied question remained open: if some billionaire wanted to spend an actually relevant percent of his net worth on politics, could he just take over everything?
I recently talked to some Silicon Valley political consultants who updated me on the status of this issue: Marc Andreessen tried this in 2024 and it basically worked. Now he is trying it a second time, it will probably work again, and Marc Andreessen will probably own every politician twice over.
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/tech-pacs-are-closing-in-on-the-almonds

32,269 Listeners

2,110 Listeners

2,674 Listeners

26,391 Listeners

4,292 Listeners

2,463 Listeners

2,279 Listeners

909 Listeners

295 Listeners

4,172 Listeners

1,619 Listeners

313 Listeners

3,831 Listeners

555 Listeners

666 Listeners