đ Code, Kings, and Coup Fantasies: Curtis Yarvin and the Silicon Crown That Would Be
Warning: This post is long, weird, and deeply unsettling. But if you want to understand the digital necromancer whispering monarchist sweet-nothings into the ears of Americaâs worst people, buckle in. Also, sources are hyperlinked in many places but thereâs an extensive bibliography at the end.
If you havenât heard of Curtis Yarvin , congratulations on having hobbies. But youâve probably encountered his ideas-filtered through MAGA talking points, tech bro delusions, or the meat-grinder that is Steve Bannonâs podcast.
Yarvin, better known to the darker corners of the web as Mencius Moldbug , is a software engineer who decided democracy was a failed experiment and that what America really needs is⌠a king. Preferably installed like a software update.
No, really. Thatâs the elevator pitch.
What started as a fringe blog post circa 2007 has, over time, metastasized into something far more dangerous: a body of pseudo-intellectual ideas that wormed their way into parts of the Trump movement, the âNew Right,â and the bloodshot eyes of Peter Thiel-funded libertarian overlords who want to run society like a GitHub repo.
đ§ Moldbugâs Manifesto: Patch Democracy, Reboot Monarchy
Yarvinâs original thesis, delivered over hundreds of rambling, footnote-riddled blog posts, goes something like this:
* Democracy is a lie.
* The American system is a sham controlled by a âCathedralâ (his term for universities, media, and the civil service).
* Progressivism is a theocratic cult.
* The cure? Corporate monarchism. A CEO-king who owns the government and runs it for profit, efficiently, like Apple. But with tanks.
Itâs the political theory equivalent of saying, âWhat if we replaced the DMV with Palantir and gave it nukes?â
đŚ Contagion: How Yarvin Infected the Right
If Yarvinâs ideas had stayed buried on blogspot, we could laugh and move on. But hereâs the kicker: people started listening.
And not just Reddit trolls and crypto bros. Weâre talking actual power players:
*Â , Thielâs hand-picked Senate candidate, echoed Yarvinâs disdain for democracy in multiple statements and essays.
* Michael Anton , of infamy, was reading Yarvin back in his Claremont days and helped bridge the gap between West Coast esoterica and East Coast wannabe aristocrats. âFlight 93 Electionâ
Even Steve Bannon , no stranger to ideological dumpster fires, has dipped into Yarvinâs style of anti-establishment nihilism-though Bannon prefers a louder, bloodier flavor.
And then thereâs the Heritage Foundationâs â â , a roadmap for authoritarian takeover cloaked in Republican branding. Strip away the suits, and itâs Yarvinâs dream: crush the administrative state, install a powerful executive, purge the bureaucracy, and answer to no one but your donors.
It would be easy-comforting, even-to dismiss Yarvin as just another online crank. But cranks with wealthy friends and influence over policy become problems.
His writing appeals to a very specific-and very dangerous-type of person:
It also fits perfectly into a larger strategy: undermine confidence in democracy by flooding the discourse with ârespectableâ alternatives that all, coincidentally, involve unelected strongmen.
That veneer of sophistication makes his ideology more seductive-and more insidious-than the usual jackboot-and-salute crowd.
Yarvinâs ideology is tailor-made for the Silicon Valley crowd:
* It sounds âdisruptive.â
* It hates regulation.
* It fetishizes order.
* It replaces public accountability with private control.
Itâs monarchy-as-startup: install a visionary founder, give him absolute control, and hope the product doesnât kill everyone.
Ironically, it also mirrors the very âCathedralâ Yarvin claims to hate. He writes like a postmodernist professor with a Reddit addiction. Itâs all layers of irony, obscure citations, and self-referential garbage meant to dazzle the easily impressed and discourage critical thinking.
đď¸ The Threat of Yarvinism in Power
Letâs be blunt: Yarvinâs vision is incompatible with democracy, the Constitution, and any form of collective governance that doesnât involve corporate shares and armed guards.
If Trump-or a more disciplined successor-regains power with a compliant Congress and an ideological mandate from outfits like Heritage, donât be surprised when Yarvinâs name starts popping up again. Not as a blog curiosity, but as a philosophical foundation for dismantling democracy by executive fiat.
Already, his fingerprints are showing up in proposals to:
* Fire thousands of civil servants and replace them with loyalists
* Centralize executive power with minimal checks
* Repeal or ignore judicial rulings
* Treat dissent as disloyalty
* Recast governance as a business, not a public service
This isnât abstract. Itâs a playbook. And itâs being studied.
đ§ź Final Thoughts: Moldbug Wears No Clothes
Curtis Yarvin wants to be the dark wizard behind the throne, whispering monarchist mantras into the ears of tech billionaires and presidential hopefuls.
But hereâs the truth: heâs a man with a laptop, too much free time, and a fetish for control disguised as theory. His ideas arenât revolutionary-theyâre regressive. His vision isnât bold-itâs borrowed from a centuries-old playbook written in blood and crowned in gold.
And yet, in a broken system where charisma beats competence and strongmen are back in style, even the most asinine ideologies can find traction.
So watch this space. Pay attention to whoâs citing Yarvin. Watch who uses phrases like âthe Cathedral,â or talks about CEOs as rulers, or thinks liberal democracy is just âmob rule.â
Because behind the irony, the blog posts, and the pseudo-clever memes, thereâs a very old idea trying to reassert itself:
You donât get a say.
Originally published at https://vagabondvisions.beehiiv.com.
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