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    1. johnnierockit on

      A high-profile network of investors and founders in Silicon Valley are promoting a new moral vision for the tech industry, in which job choices and other decisions are guided not by the pursuit of wealth, but according to Christian values and Western cultural frameworks.

      At an event in San Francisco last week hosted in a former church, Trae Stephens, cofounder of the defense contractor Anduril, And a partner at the Peter Thiel–led venture capital firm Founders Fund, characterized the idea as the pursuit of “good quests” or careers that make the future better, a concept that he said has theological underpinnings.

      “I’m literally an arms dealer,” Stephens said at one point, prompting laughter from the crowd of roughly 200 people, which included Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan. “I don’t think all of you should be arms dealers, but that’s a pretty unique calling.”

      The hour-long discussion was part of a series of ticketed gatherings organized by ACTS 17 Collective, a nonprofit founded last year by Stephens’ wife, health care startup executive Michelle Stephens.

      The group, whose name is an acronym that stands for “Acknowledging Christ in Technology and Society,” is on a mission to “redefine success for those that define culture,” she says.

      In Michelle’s view, tech workers mostly believe in arbitrary metrics of success, like money and power, leaving some of them feeling empty and hopeless. She wants them to believe instead that “success can be defined as loving God, myself, and others.”

      People of all denominations—including atheists—are welcome at ACT 17 events. Last Thursday’s event had low-key party vibes. Bartenders served beer and wine, a DJ was spinning light worship beats, and prayer booklets rested on a table.

      The idea for ACTS 17 and a speaker series on faith actually took root at a party, Michelle says. In November 2023, during a three-day 40th birthday party for Trae in New Mexico, Peter Thiel led a talk on miracles and forgiveness. Guests were intrigued.

      “Folks were coming up to us saying things like, ‘I didn’t know Peter is a Christian,’ ‘How can you be gay and a billionaire and be Christian?’, ‘I didn’t know you could be smart and a Christian,’ and ‘What can you give me to read or listen to learn more?’” Michelle says.

      The Stephens have long-standing connections to Thiel. In addition to helping start Anduril and working at Founders Fund, Trae was also an early employee at data intelligence firm Palantir, a company cofounded by Thiel that develops tools used by the US military.

      At the ACTS 17 last Thursday, Trae appeared to echo a number of ideas Thiel has also espoused about technology and Christianity. He emphasized that jobs outside the church can be sacred, citing Martin Luther’s work during the Protestant Reformation.

      “The roles that we’re called into are not only important and valuable on a personal level, but it’s also critical to carry out God’s command to bring his kingdom to Earth as it is in heaven,” Trae said.

      Thiel made nearly identical comments in a 2015 essay arguing that technological progress should be accelerated. Science and technology, he wrote, are natural allies of “Judeo-Western optimism,” especially if “we remain open to an eschatological frame in which God works through us in building the kingdom of heaven today, here on Earth.”

      ⏬ Bluesky ‚bite-sized‘ article thread (10 min) with added links 📖 🍿 🔊

      [https://bsky.app/profile/johnhatchard.bsky.social/post/3lke327tnsc2w](https://bsky.app/profile/johnhatchard.bsky.social/post/3lke327tnsc2w)

      [archive.is/q42Qt](https://archive.is/q42Qt)

    2. EricFromOuterSpace on

      “I’m literally an arms dealer,” Stephens said at one point, prompting laughter from the crowd of roughly 200 people, which included Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan. “I don’t think all of you should be arms dealers, but that’s a pretty unique calling.”

      satire is dead

    3. runthepoint1 on

      The true sign of their actual acceptance of all of this talk is when they themselves show public humility and are able to be examples of this.

      Not to show how perfect they are but to show their admission of guilt and repentance are good things to emulate. After all, as the Bible says, we shall know them by their deeds. Let’s focus on what they do, not on what they say. Yes I acknowledge speech is action, but let’s be careful not to hear their overall message.

      Is it humility? Or not?

    4. HardPass404 on

      Decisions made in the pursuit of wealth are immoral! Now where are the altar boys? – The Church

    5. DeadWaterBed on

      Grifters, the lot of them. Suddenly the rich and powerful are remembering just how easy a target Christian tend to be.

    6. ploomyoctopus on

      „People of all denominations—including atheists—are welcome at ACT 17 events.“

      Here’s the thing. As a lifelong nonbeliever, I can’t imaging *wanting* to be at these events. I don’t want to go to church. Honestly, I only want to hang out out with religious people if there’s no mention of religion. I sure as hell don’t want to go to some tech bro’s Peter-Thiel wet dream of „heaven on earth.“ Falls into the category to me of Christians being insufferable.

      Religion is like a penis. It’s all well and good if you want to share it with people who are interested, but keep it out of public, keep it away from unwilling partners, and *definitely* keep it away from children and people who can’t consent.

    7. MadeWithRove on

      Dogmas upon dogmas. Leaders upon leaders. I see no collective revolution nor human heaven here. Just old gods taking new disguises.

    8. Thiel definitely needs to pray. I’d pray too if I had several men’s fists inside me at the same time.

    9. Since scripture says that they are unlikely to get pass the Pearly Gates, and there’s no banking branches up there, seems like this is the only to make themselves feel good…

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