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[Digital Today AI Reporter] Palantir sparked controversy after publishing a public essay that criticized inclusion and pluralism and called for bolstering AI-driven military capabilities.
On April 19 (local time), IT outlet TechCrunch reported that the post distilled the core arguments of The Technological Republic, a book co‑written by CEO Alexander Karp and head of external affairs Nicholas Zamiska, into 22 points.
Palantir said it published the post “Because we get asked a lot,” but the document did more than summarize the book — it put the company’s values and national‑security perspective front and center. The firm argued that Silicon Valley “owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible,” warning that free email is not enough. It urged private tech companies not to confine themselves to consumer services, but to play an active role in national security and the industrial base.
The core dispute centers on AI and military technology. Palantir emphasized that the critical question is not whether AI weapons will be built, but who will build them and for what purposes. The company warned that adversaries will not be stalled by ethical debates and will press ahead with military development, asserting that a new AI‑based deterrence regime could replace the nuclear‑deterrence era.
The post also took aim at cultural and political trends. It warned against the “seduction of hollow pluralism,” arguing that an uncritical embrace of inclusion and diversity can obscure both achievements and problems in certain cultures. The authors were critical of the postwar arrangements for Germany and Japan, saying Germany’s weakened military and Japan’s pacifism could strain the balance of power in Europe and Asia, respectively.
Those arguments have heightened scrutiny because they dovetail with Palantir’s business. The company has long supplied surveillance and analytics software to defense and intelligence agencies, immigration authorities and police forces. Its recent work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and its public emphasis on “defending the West” have drawn criticism and closer examination from inside and outside the tech sector.
Democratic members of Congress recently sent letters to ICE and the Department of Homeland Security seeking more information about how surveillance companies, including Palantir, have been used to support hardline deportation policies. While the post did not directly address those concerns, it intensified debate over the connection between Palantir’s security‑first rhetoric and its commercial contracts.
Eliot Higgins, CEO of Bellingcat, warned the post could undermine core democratic principles — verification, deliberation and accountability — arguing that the 22 points represent a political stance tied to corporate profit rather than a neutral philosophy.
Because we get asked a lot.
The Technological Republic, in brief.
1. Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible. The engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation.
2. We must rebel…
— Palantir (@PalantirTech) April 18, 2026











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