Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the latest scion of the Kennedy clan to seek the presidency, has a set of unusual fans: some of the most influential tech executives and investors in America. Kennedyās strong anti-vaccine views are, for this group, a sideshow.
āTearing down all these institutions of power. It gives me glee,ā said one of his boosters in tech, Chamath Palihapitiya, a garrulous former Facebook executive, nearly two hours into a May episode of the popular āAll-Inā podcast he co-hosts with other tech luminaries. The person who might help with the demolition was the showās guest, Kennedy himself.
āMe too,ā responded David Sacks, Palihapitiyaās co-host on the podcast, an early investor in Facebook and Uber. Sacks and Palihapitiya said they would host a fundraiser for Kennedy, which, according to the outlet, was set for June 15.
Kennedyās newfound friends in Silicon Valley were mostly loud supporters of vaccines early in the pandemic, but they have proven more than willing to let him expound on his anti-vaccine views and conspiracy theories as he promotes his presidential bid. During a two-hour forum on Twitter, hosted by company owner Elon Musk and Sacks, Kennedy raised a range of themes, but returned to the subject heās become famous for in recent years: his skepticism about vaccines and the pharmaceutical companies that sell them.
Indeed, on the June 5 appearance, he praised Musk for ending ācensorshipā on his corner of social media. A promoter of conspiracy theories, Kennedy said various forces are keeping him from discussing his safety concerns over vaccines, like Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff (as part of the intelligence apparatus), Big Pharma, and Roger Ailes (who has been dead for six years).
Kennedy argued an influx of direct-to-consumer advertising from pharmaceutical concerns keep media outlets, like Fox News, from featuring his theories about vaccine safety. Fox didnāt respond to a request for comment.
He then said he supported reversing policies that allow direct-to-consumer ads in media. (Kennedy earlier dubbed himself a āfree-speech absolutistā and, later, in a discussion about nuclear power, a āfree-market absolutistā and even later a āconstitutional absolutist.ā Legal scholars , on First Amendment grounds, would be receptive to a ban of direct-to-consumer ads.)
Support for Kennedy in the venture capital and tech communities, which have a big financial stake in the advancement of science and generally reject irrational conspiracy theories, is likely limited. Multiple venture capitalists and technologists contacted by Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News expressed puzzlement over whatās driving the embrace from Musk and others.
āI think he is a lower-intellect, Democratic version of Donald Trump, so he attracts libertarian-leaning, anti-āwoke,ā socially liberal folks as a protest vote,ā said Robert Nelsen, a biotech investor with Arch Venture Partners. āI think he is a dangerous conspiracy theorist, who has contributed to many deaths with his anti-vaccine lies.ā
But the ones with the megaphones are letting Kennedy talk. Jason Calacanis, another co-host of āAll-Inā and a pal of Muskās, said late in the podcast he was pleased the conversation didnāt lead with āsensationalā topics ā like vaccines. Still, during the podcast, Kennedy was given nearly five uninterrupted minutes to describe his views on shots ā a long list of alleged safety problems, ranging from allergies, autism, to autoimmune problems, many of which have been discredited by reputable scientists.
David Friedberg, another Silicon Valley executive and guest on the show, suggested there wasnāt ādirect evidenceā for those problems. āI donāt think itās solely the vaccines,ā Kennedy conceded. After an interlude touching on the role of chemicals, he was back to injuries caused by diphtheria shots.
While Friedberg, a former Google executive and founder of an agriculture startup sold to Monsanto for a reported $1.1 billion, pushed back against Kennedy, he did so deep into the podcast, after the candidate had left. Kennedyās views ā on nuclear power and vaccines ā manifest āas conspiracy theories,ā he said. āIt doesnāt resonate with me,ā he continued, as he ālikes to have empirical truth be demonstrated.ā
The muted pushback is a bit of a reversal. Early in the rollout of covid-19 vaccines, many tech luminaries had been among the most loudly pro-shot individuals. The āAll-Inā crew was no exception. Sacks , āWeāve got to raise the bar for what we expect from governmentā; Palihapitiya to āstop virtue signalingā with vaccination criteria and simply mass-vaccinate instead.
That was then. Sacks recently retweeted a video of Bill Gates questioning the effectiveness of current covid vaccines and defended Kennedy from charges of being anti-vaccination.
Musk himself has sometimes suggested he has qualms with vaccines, , without evidence, that āIām pro vaccines in general, but thereās a point where the cure/vaccine is potentially worse, if administered to the whole population, than the disease.ā
Musk isnāt the only top tech executive to signal interest in Kennedyās candidacy. Block CEO and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey Kennedy ācan and willā win the presidency.
In some ways, the Valleyās interest in Kennedy ā vaccine skepticism and all ā has deep roots. Tech culture grew out of Bay Area counterculture. It has historically embraced individualistic theories of health and wellness. While most have conventional views on health, techies have dabbled in ānootropics,ā supplements that purportedly boost mental performance, plus fad diets, microdosing psychedelics, and even quests for immortality.
Thereās a ādeeply held anti-establishment ethosā among many tech leaders, said University of Washington historian Margaret OāMara. Thereās a āsuspicion of authority, disdain for gatekeepers and traditionalists, dislike of bureaucracies of all kinds. This too has its roots in the counterculture era, and the 1960s antiwar movement, in particular.ā
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