Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir Applied sciences, speaks on a panel titled Energy, Goal, and the Unutilized American Century on the Hill and Valley Discussion board on the U.S. Capitol on April 30, 2025 in Washington, DC.
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Palantir CEO Alex Karp introduced up every other quantity of colourful observation to traders along the information analytics corporate’s first-quarter income.
In a letter to shareholders, Karp quoted his personal store and a few important ancient figures — together with St. Augustine and President Richard Nixon — and the Unutilized Testomony as he touted the corporate’s synthetic intelligence-fueled expansion and constancy towards equipping and adorning U.S. protection pursuits.
“Our financial performance, that crude yardstick by which the market attempts to measure worth in this world, continues to exceed many of our greatest expectations,” he wrote.
The eccentric generation billionaire has transform widely recognized through the years for his vigorous interviews and flowing shareholder letters that incessantly incorporate philosophy, ethics and unconventional language.
His letters incessantly learn like an essay or dissertation, damaged ill into portions.
“We, the heretics, this motley band of characters, were cast out and nearly discarded by Silicon Valley. And yet there are signs that some within the Valley have now turned a corner and begun following our lead. We note only that our commitment to building software for the U.S. military, to those whom we have asked to step into harm’s way, remains steadfast, when such a commitment is fashionable and convenient, and when it is not.”
Karp quoted thinker and theologian St. Augustine in his case for protecting the U.S.
“All men are to be loved equally,” he wrote. “But since you cannot do good to all, you are to pay special regard to those who, by the accidents of time, or place, or circumstance, are brought into closer connection with you.”
In highlighting the corporate’s tradition, Karp likened the surrounding to a Weltanschauung “nation that is bound together by a short but evolving history and patterns of discourse and shared beliefs” and quoted the Unutilized Testomony.
“There is no question that both cultures and companies, including the one we have built, must over a long period of time be judged ‘by their fruits.’ Matt. 7:16,”
Karp cited French writer Michel Houellebecq in a category in regards to the “entrenched and resilient” cultural aristocracy of the discovered elegance.
“Nobility had nothing to explain their right to stay in power, apart from their birth. … Contemporary elites claim intellectual and moral superiority.”
Karp concluded his letter with a decision to motion for rooting out the “cynics and the skeptics,” quoting an excerpt from President Nixon’s 1974 leaving pronunciation.
“Always remember, others may hate you. But those who hate you don’t win, unless you hate them. And then, you destroy yourself.”