fir3dvst 7 hours ago

don't they plan to cut defense spending? Where's the gold, competing with Lockheed?

bix6 7 hours ago

“My most effective and moral friends are now working for Palantir,” Ganesan says.

This statement is so absurd to me I don’t even know where to begin.

Effective, sure. Moral? Hmmmm. I’m not sure building tech to snipe people from on high is moral?

  • bix6 6 hours ago

    I was curious so Chat looked this fun fact up:

    As of March 2025, Herbert L. Abrams is the only individual affiliated with Stanford University who has been associated with a Nobel Peace Prize. He served as the founding vice president of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), which was collectively awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985 for its efforts to prevent nuclear war.

  • threatofrain 5 hours ago

    Do you think war is just inherently immoral? What should a country do to not be Ukraine?

  • delichon 6 hours ago

    If you believe "si vis pacem, para bellum", then yes, moral plus essential.

  • gorpy7 6 hours ago

    Is it possible to be moral and dead?

    • flashgordon 4 hours ago

      Quite possible. But is it preferable though?

  • bell-cot 6 hours ago

    Stanford is packed with extremely bright, ambitious students. Who can easily optimize their "beliefs and values", for getting ahead.

    What's the big downside, from their PoV? Being regarded as "immoral" by a few mostly-impotent-and-irrelevant idealists is probably an upside, due to the cred boost in their new in-group.