Chamath Palihapitiya
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Yeah, it's definitely not material.
Listen, continued success.
And you're hiring a lot of people.
All right.
So everybody go to the IRAN website.
And listen, the company's doing fantastic.
Thanks for spending some time with us here at All In at GTC.
Thanks, Jason.
Appreciate it.
The one thing though that I think even now is underestimated by all actors in industry and including in Silicon Valley is how disruptive these technologies are.
If you are going to disrupt the economic and therefore political power significantly of one party space, highly educated,
often female voters, who vote mostly Democrat, and military and working class people who do not feel supported.
And you feel like that's, you believe that that's going to work out politically.
You're in an insane asylum.
Like, that you cannot have, this technology disrupts humanities trained, largely Democratic voters, and makes their economic power less.
And increases the power, economic power, of vocationally trained, working class, often male,
voters and so these disruptions are going to disrupt every aspect of our society and to make this work we have to come to an agreement of what it is we're going to do with the technology how are we going to explain to people who are likely going to have less good and less interesting jobs from their perspective and how is it that we are going and by the way on the military thing
These technologies are dangerous societally.
The only justification you could possibly have would be that if we don't do it, our adversaries will do it and we will be subject to their rule of law.
So if you decouple this from the support of the military, you're going to have an enormous problem explaining to the American people why is it that we're absorbing the risk of disrupting the very fabric of our society, including the most powerful