180 comments

  • andy_ppp an hour ago

    I think rich people have too much influence, I probably agree with Garry Tan on a lot but we need to get money out of politics. Let’s face it we’re all meant to get one vote but rich people spend money on this stuff so that they manipulate what and who can be voted for.

    I do think that if this current system is the result of democracy + the internet we need to seriously reconsider how democracy works because it’s currently failing everyone but the ultra wealthy.

    • fainpul 3 minutes ago

      Every "democracy" I know, has become a plutocracy.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plutocracy

    • supjeff 37 minutes ago

      I agree with you, in spirit, but I think the true issue lies elsewhere.

      Rich people can spend money to influence elections, yes, but how can they do it? through political donations, super-pacs and bribes. Bribes are already illegal. political donations and super-pacs can give politicians the juice they need to get their messaging out, but getting the message across isn't enough to win an election. The people need to vote. Billionaires can spend as much money as they want to support candidates, but a billionaire still only has one vote to cast.

      My point is, billionaires can pay for all the political campaigns in the world, but the electorate gets the final say. It's up to us to A) run for office and B) vote for the best candidate (but tell that to the 64% turnout in the 2024 presidential election)

    • yndoendo 30 minutes ago

      Eat the rich.

      I do so by taking Jeff Bezos' money and giving him a penny. Also by not supporting restaurants that have a Wall-street ticker nor any alcohol producers that have a Wall-street ticker.

      • etrautmann 17 minutes ago

        What does this mean? are you employed by Amazon and phoning it in, or how are you extracting money from Bezos?

    • assimpleaspossi 24 minutes ago

      You are spot on about rich people buying influence this way but it has nothing to do with how great democracy is.

    • terminalshort an hour ago

      How do you define "manipulate" here?

      • andy_ppp 22 minutes ago

        There are great tools available that I’m sure you could use to give you a synopsis of how money is used to manipulate political outcomes and entrench wealth and power.

    • femiagbabiaka an hour ago

      This is an underrated point because the U.S. failure to rein in the excesses of the ultra-wealthy is not just impacting our domestic politics but actually the politics of every country on earth. Imagine if Jack Ma had eventually personally intervened in U.S. congressional elections? That's pretty much exactly what U.S. oligarchs do to other countries regularly.

      • terminalshort an hour ago

        You are using a lot of obfuscated and loaded language. What, specifically, are the "excesses of the ultra-wealthy" that need to be reigned in? What do you mean by "personally intervened in U.S. congressional relations"?

        • femiagbabiaka 44 minutes ago

          I'm commenting on one such excess. Here is another: https://www.politico.com/news/2026/01/31/elon-musk-2026-elec.... The Nazification of X and federal subsidies for Elon's companies are another. There are many more examples.

          s/relations/elections/ -- because Elon et. al don't just intervene in the elections of the country they live in, but actually any country he's interested in -- and uses the U.S. as a bludgeon in that effort, see U.S.-U.K. and U.S.-South Africa relations

          • terminalshort 40 minutes ago

            How is Elon's editorial control of X something the government needs to (or even should have the power to) "reign in?" How is that not freedom of the press just like the owner of the New York Times having editorial control over his newspaper? Same goes for his donation to the PAC. What is the nefarious activity they are engaged in? Why are they not allowed to exercise their freedom of the press in the same way as any other company?

            • amarcheschi 30 minutes ago

              He allowed child porn to proliferate for days on the platform

            • femiagbabiaka 23 minutes ago

              1. X is not, and has never been, "the press". 2. If you were to have categorized them this way previously, botting and pay-for-reach have made it definitely not that way now. 3. It is bad when any individual can shift the politics of the entire globe simply because they have enough money. Feel free to insert your most hated left-wing billionaire instead of Elon, I still believe the same thing.

              • terminalshort 9 minutes ago

                Yes, it absolutely is the press. Any publication of any information is the press. I don't have any hated left wing billionaires, just ones I disagree with. But let's take the bogeyman himself, (((George Soros)))!!!!. I think he should have every right to continue to use his personal wealth to advance his political agenda, including every piece of it that I despise. I believe this because it is his fundamental right as a citizen of the republic. I think every left wing organization that I find odious should be able to raise money and show ads on TV and on the internet to publicize their political opinions. I think that if there were a communist billionaire he should be able to start newspapers, TV and radio stations, social media companies, or any other form of communication and use them to spread his message that the US should be a communist state and support communist candidates for office.

                • femiagbabiaka 6 minutes ago

                  > I believe this because it is his fundamental right as a citizen of the republic.

                  This is kind of exactly my point though. Citizen of what republic? Soros and Elon are both wealthier than most states and affect politics globally. They literally cannot be prosecuted, they are barely accountable to any legal bodies.

            • Teever 26 minutes ago

              What's wrong with a sovereign nation taking steps to reduce or eliminate the influence of a non-citizen who they feel is acting against the best interests of that nation?

              If a nuclear capable country like France decides that someone like Elon Musk is acting against the best interests of their country they can ask him nicely to stop and if he continues they can use force to reduce the perceived threat.

              This all seems completely in line with the day-to-day norms of contemporary society as well as historical norms.

              • terminalshort 5 minutes ago

                He is a citizen of the US and has full political rights. There is only one legal distinction between a foreign born citizen and a natural born citizen and that is that he can't serve as president. France is absolutely capable of using force against Elon Musk up to and including their nuclear arsenal. However, they would need to decide whether it is worse for their interests to tolerate Elon or to detonate a nuke on US soil, and that's a pretty easy choice.

    • bpodgursky an hour ago

      If rich techies had too much influence in California, the state government would not look like what it does. I mean I just don't see how you get to this opinion after any real review of the evidence.

      • andy_ppp 41 minutes ago

        You cherry picked California which is very much an outlier compared to the rest of the country? Are you denying the effect of money affecting political outcomes, the rich wouldn’t spend their money on media and PACs if it didn’t work would they?

        • bpodgursky 30 minutes ago

          > Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan launches group to influence CA politics

          I'm talking about the actual issue being discussed! Garry Tan isn't launching a group to influence Wyoming politics.

      • terminalshort 22 minutes ago

        These idiots are so consumed by envy that they actually think the founders and executives of massive companies are less competent than themselves and average people. I find it disgusting and hilarious at the same time.

        • phatfish 9 minutes ago

          Less competent might be a disservice. But I've seen nothing to suggest that execs/founders are any more competent that the average employee. Execs and founders just had a few more dice rolls go their way.

      • refulgentis 40 minutes ago

        > I mean I just don't see how you get to this opinion after any real review of the evidence.

        Graybeard here: took me a while to get it, but, usually these are chances to elucidate what is obvious to you :)* ex. I don't really know what you mean. What does the California state government look like if rich techies had even more influence? I can construct a facile version (lower taxes**) but assuredly you mean more than that to be taken so aback.

        * Good Atlas Shrugged quote on this: "Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think that you are facing a contradiction, check [ED: or share, if you've moseyed yourself into a discussion] your premises."

        ** It's not 100% clear politicians steered by California techies would lower taxes ad infinitum.

    • xyst an hour ago

      System is broken af. Politicians don’t want to reign in on campaign financing because it will hurt their own re-election and campaign fundraising.

      Republicans have bought/installed the SCOTUS which allowed for favorable decision in Citizens United v FEC.

      This corporation dominated landscape is quite awful. Corporations have more rights than woman right now.

      • terminalshort an hour ago

        Citizens United was the correct decision. I don't understand how you can legitimately restrict political activity. The constitution contains the right to petition the government for redress of grievances. Why should certain groups of people not have this right? The constitution also contains the right to freedom of the press. Why should the government get to decide who gets to exercise this right?

        • andy_ppp 39 minutes ago

          Every other country on earth has spending limits, the constitution isn’t perfect and it’s being dismantled by the current regime. Maybe it could be updated to say covering up for pedo billionaires should carry extremely harsh sentences, for example…

        • kmeisthax 6 minutes ago

          Because democracy is "one person one vote", not "one dollar one vote".

          Around the same time Citizens United was decided, we also got McCutcheon v. FEC, which invalidated campaign contribution limits basically completely. If we take the logic of Citizens United at its word - that money is speech - then letting someone drop billions of dollars to change an election is like firing a sonic weapon at a bunch of protesters to silence them. So, right off the bat, we have a situation where protecting the "speech" of the rich and powerful directly imperils the speech of everyone else.

          But it gets worse. Because we got rid of campaign financing limitations, there has been an arms race with campaign funding that has made all speech completely, 100% pay-to-play. We have libre speech, but not gratis speech.

          This isn't even a problem limited to merely political speech. Every large forum by which speech occurs expects you to buy advertising on their own platform now before you are heard. If you, say, sell a book on Amazon or post a video on TikTok, you're expected to buy ads for it on Amazon or TikTok. You are otherwise shut out of the system because discovery algorithms want you keep you in your own bubble and you're competing with lots and lots of spam.

      • barney54 9 minutes ago

        Are you saving that an organization should be able to put together a documentary to criticize Trump and his supporters? Because that’s what Citizen’s United allowed. If you don’t support that, then the criticism will only come from rich individuals.

    • oulipo2 39 minutes ago

      Exactly.

      We should tax billionaires away.

      • terminalshort 23 minutes ago

        Taxes exist to fund the government which exists to solve collective action problems. I despise your attitude that taxes are a tool to punish people you don't like. I find it to be morally repugnant and I will always side with the billionaires defending themselves against people like you no matter often you repeat the word "bootlicker."

        • JKCalhoun a minute ago

          > Taxes exist to fund the government which exists to solve collective action problems.

          Wealth inequality, billionaires trying to skew politics… kind of a problem that needs collective action.

        • roughly 13 minutes ago

          Wait, are you suggesting we _shouldn't_ treat billionaires as a collective action problem to be dealt with via policy? So you're suggesting what, individual violence?

    • abtinf an hour ago

      > we need to get money out of politics.

      We need to get the power out of politics.

      • cjs_ac an hour ago

        Politics is about deciding who gets to exercise power and what they get to do with it. Politics detached from power is just pointless squabbling.

        • nkmnz 27 minutes ago

          So how about exercising less power?

          • 8note 19 minutes ago

            i dont see how that would change the ultimate "money grants too much power"

            if the government exerts less democratic power, money will still exert too much capitalist power

        • mothballed 38 minutes ago

          It's not, since voluntary transactions can happen as a result of said squabbling without resorting to the violence of 'power.' Maybe we need more of that and less of ramming decisions down the throats of the powerless.

          • andy_ppp 34 minutes ago

            Yeah I sometimes think you could have a government you select, e.g. each state could have its own rules and laws and the federal government should not have the power to overrule them. Then you could choose if you wanted immigration or lower taxes or whatever, seems like a good system who can suggest it?

            • mothballed 29 minutes ago

              Yes the 10th amendment was supposed to ensure a lot of that that but it was largely waived away during the progressive era and in acts related to the civil war. But cuz slavery for some reason it also has to apply to all sorts of other things that have nothing to do with slaves or even civil rights (in the sense of negative rights) and you are racist or love slaves or something for pointing this out.

          • Tarq0n 36 minutes ago

            Not really a solution for large-scale collective action problems.

      • xixixao 24 minutes ago

        All reactions are taking this comment seriously, but I think it can be also read as "money equals power" (which I strongly believe - there's some power without money and sometimes money without power, but mostly those two are fungible) - and then pointing to the futility of getting money out of politics, since politics is about power.

        But really what people mean is "prevent paid political advertisement of all kinds", which seems about as hard as "get rid of all kinds of advertisement" - at some point, you're back to power, communication, attention.

        Hard problems. Probably there's a reason all ancient democracies did not survive.

      • snihalani an hour ago

        I wish we had direct voting on important decisions

        • jandrewrogers an hour ago

          This has proven to be a disaster in practice. See also: California.

          • Gud 42 minutes ago

            It’s working fantastic here in Switzerland.

          • w4yai 36 minutes ago

            Wrong.

            It has actually been scientifically proven otherwise in crowd theory : with the right setup, the crowd is more effective to take a good decision that the top1 best decision maker.

            Exemple : a crowd playing chess may beat the top1 chess player, even though the crowd individually cannot beat him.

            • a_t48 23 minutes ago

              A crowd playing chess can absolutely not beat a top chess player.

              • dmoy 3 minutes ago

                Yea in fact this thing has been done before multiple times as exhibitions (Kasparov vs 50k, Carlsen vs 132k, etc).

                And yea, no surprise, the masses do not win. Even when in the latter case, a huge chunk of the 132k was obviously using stockfish cranked to the gills (though the did get a draw out of it?).

        • podgietaru 19 minutes ago

          Brexit.

        • Analemma_ an hour ago

          Hell no, California has this and it’s a catastrophe. Prop 13 is one of the worst policies enacted by a democratic polity in the 20th century, and has been wrecking the state for decades.

          • terminalshort an hour ago

            So do you believe in democracy or not? And I do not mean this as a loaded question because the value of democracy is a legitimately arguable point. If the majority of Californians want caps on property tax, then I do not see a good argument that they should not get it that is also compatible with democracy.

            • biophysboy an hour ago

              Democracy can mean a lot of things: direct, representative, etc. Voting for yourself is different from voting for your constituents. Ideally, the latter will also consider community effects.

            • thomassmith65 42 minutes ago

              If you put a question to the electorate like 'should we tax only people whose last name begins with an X, Y or Z?', it's liable to pass.

              Nobody really advocates for Direct Democracy. It isn't viable: 'tyranny of the majority' etc.

              Most Western governments are Liberal Democracies - where some issues aren't subject to a vote - partly so that the mob can't persecute outnumbered subgroups.

              • chr1 8 minutes ago

                [delayed]

              • jemmyw 22 minutes ago

                That is highly unlikely. People may seem stupid when acting as a larger group, but I think part of that is that our current democracy doesn't require much engagement. If we moved to direct democracy then imo we'd get some bad policies that would quickly be reverted once the effects become apparent, and then voters are going to be a bit more careful. For example, "only taxing people whose last name begins with X, Y, Z", I don't think voters would currently be that dumb, but if they were then how many weeks of zero tax money would it take to get that undone?

            • drecked 40 minutes ago

              Democracy != Direct voting.

              It’s never meant that.

              So people can “believe” in Democracy just fine and still think direct voting is bad.

              Also, Democracy doesn’t even mean “if a majority of people believe X, therefore X”.

              • lvass 20 minutes ago

                False, cf. ancient Athens.

          • chr1 42 minutes ago

            Why do you think that similar law could not be passed without direct vote? The problem is not direct democracy but the fact that it is being done in a wrong way.

            Voting should be done without anonymity, online. One should be able to either vote for everything manually, or delegate the vote to any other person.

            If some change is supported by 100% of the voters it should be implemented immediately. But if smaller percent supports the change, then there needs to be a vesting time (e.g. 10 years for 60%, infinity for 50%+1).

            This allows people to either trade support for policies (i'll vote yes for your initiative if you vote for mine, or give me money), or to get high level of support locally and try out various laws on local level.

            The same site that manages voting should also show detailed budget of city/state/country, where people can see where their taxes are being spent and should be able to redirect the money they have paid.

          • Gud 41 minutes ago

            Having some random vote is hardly direct democracy, though.

            Parts of the US is mature enough to implement a similar system as Switzerland, which has a superior form of democracy.

          • asdff 36 minutes ago

            Prop 13 is a nothingburger. Median homeownership period in california vs nationally is only like 2 years longer. It shouldn't be affecting costs that much in other words since median property is back to market rate every 15 years or so.

            And what costs are we talking about anyhow? Tax shortfalls for local government? Decades later that has been rectified through other taxes and funding mechanisms and we still get new roads and schools in california. Housing costs increasing? I would say the fact that cities today are zoned within a few percentage points of present population levels (vs zoned for 10x present population levels pre 1970) is the actual source of that sucking sound from the chest.

            • zozbot234 31 minutes ago

              That's not really the point. Prop 13 is known to be a huge disincentive to efficient transfers in home ownership - people will strenuously avoid selling their homes and buying something that's closer to the kind of shelter they actually prefer, because they might have to pay a higher assessed property tax if they did that. These effects are very real and well documented.

              • asdff 14 minutes ago

                Prop 13 wouldn't lead to those incentives if property prices didn't increase so aggressively. Once again comes back to zoning as the root cause. Is prop 13 bad? Only in the face of inappropriate zoned capacity, it seems. Which begs the question of what prop 13 removal would even do in such a situation? Zoning capacity isn't changing so prices will still go up beyond what is affordable for the median worker. The only thing changing is people won't be insulated from that rise at the end of their life when they are on a fixed income is all. Does that solve the housing crisis? No, but it does ensure more people are regularly displaced from their homes.

                • zozbot234 2 minutes ago

                  Property prices are increasing so aggressively because assessed property taxes are low and people are significantly deterred from selling.

          • mystraline an hour ago

            Prop 13 isnt bad. Its all the money pumped in to political advertisements that turn this from "1 person, 1 vote" to "1$, 1 vote".

            And that goes to the heart of the matter, that corporations aren't people, no matter what some court or law says. And they should be heavily restricted on speech. (I include spending money on political adverts and similar.)

            Humans can commit crimes worthy of the death penalty. Wells Fargo shouldn't exist due to their decade long fraud. Nor should United Health Care, for actively denying humans their health coverage until the humans died. Or countless other cases.

            When a company gets "killed", and all assets get assigned to the wronged, I'll start to believe they are humans. Haven't seen that yet. Likely won't ever, in the USA.

          • mothballed an hour ago

            Courts can just overturn direct vote anyway like they did prop 8.

      • Daishiman an hour ago

        Power exists whether you like it or not and when power gets away from decisionmaking you just generate a power vacuum.

        Power needs to be placed in the hands of better decision-makers. That starts from getting money out of politics.

      • CodingJeebus an hour ago

        What is money if not a proxy of power? If money didn't buy power, no one would be interested in attaining billions in wealth.

        • limagnolia an hour ago

          What is politics if not a means of exercising power? If there were no power in politics, no one would be interested in politics.

          • RobotToaster 42 minutes ago

            That power is supposed to be exercised to enact the will of the people, for the good of the people.

            • limagnolia 11 minutes ago

              Is it? In the US, our constitution is setup to prevent absolute democracy from occurring. The idea of an absolute democracy where the government always acts on the will of the majority as an ideal is hardly a universal value.

          • CodingJeebus 40 minutes ago

            How does a government without power work? How do you take power out of the process of governing?

            • limagnolia 16 minutes ago

              Yes, that is my point. You can't take power out of politics, and you can't take money (which is one form of power) out of politics. Best you can do is manage it.

        • cess11 an hour ago

          "no one would be interested in attaining billions in wealth"

          Sounds good to me.

        • terminalshort an hour ago

          They are obviously related, but it is a very loose correlation. If a billionaire (who does not pay me) gives me an order I will laugh in his face. If a traffic cop gives me an order, I will comply.

          • TFYS an hour ago

            > (who does not pay me)

            You're answering a comment saying money is power by saying that it isn't if it's not used?

            Even if the billionaire doesn't pay you, they can pay someone else to force you to do what they want.

            • terminalshort an hour ago

              Who is he going to pay an how is that person going to force me to comply?

              • mystraline an hour ago

                Pinkertons. And the US national guard.

                Its happened before, over labor disputes and unionization.

                A LOT of people died, both in anti-union and union sides.

                And thats why we have, well, had, the National Labor Relations Board. It was to make a peaceful way to negotiate worker rights.

                Maybe if it did go away completely, and the violence comes back, that people in power would be reminded WHY we had union structure and law in the federal government to begin with. It wasn't for the warm fuzzies.

                • ryandrake 27 minutes ago

                  Not to mention Lawyers.

                  The civil court system is basically a way for wealthy people and corporations to use money to silence and/or coerce behavior out of less wealthy people. If Elon Musk or Larry Ellison woke up one day and decided to sue me, and defending myself would cost 100X my net worth, I'm probably just going to give up and do whatever they want me to do.

                  • mothballed 15 minutes ago

                    There still is something to it. You could bring your billion to Dubai and it might buy you some pardons from personal indiscretions and a cadre of quasi-slaves but the monarchs would never grant you real systemic political power.

        • Barrin92 25 minutes ago

          >What is money if not a proxy of power?

          for a lot of people in the newly rich class, a kind of virtual currency best compared to a high score in a videogame. Symbolic and representing status. It's why when they attempt to translate it into power this particular class thankfully fares fairly badly, from the article:

          "TogetherSF, a similar nonprofit backed by venture capitalist Michael Moritz, crashed and burned after the 2024 elections when its $9.5 million ballot measure to reform the city charter lost to a progressive counter-measure backed by about $117,000."

      • bigyabai an hour ago

        Once you figure that out, get to work on the flying pig.

  • ChicagoDave 21 minutes ago

    This is one of the guys that thinks we should eliminate voting because he thinks him, Thiel, Zuckerberg, Bezos all know "better" than the people.

  • Computer0 an hour ago

    Praying for Garry's downfall used to be a hobby of mine but these days it seems like it will take up less of my time as he has become aligned with my other enemies, reducing my number of enemy agents at play at any given time, or at least the number of attack vectors they have on me.

    • techbro92 an hour ago

      This reads as completely schizophrenic

      • hersko an hour ago

        There is a certain type of person whose brain is completely broken by the internet. Hope OP finds help.

      • smashah 2 minutes ago

        You must know nothing about Garry Tan. Actually OPs, rant is quite reasonable.

        Garry Tan aligns himself with Genociders and genocide supporters.

      • curiousgal an hour ago

        I thought it was hilarious, a tongue in cheek

  • fff_123l 24 minutes ago

    The title was changed, but "dark money" has a specific meaning in US politics that is now lost:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_money

    Such a group is not a PAC or a Super PAC, but anonymizes donors. It can be used as a vehicle to transfer money to a Super PAC while only naming the dark money group and keeping the donors secret.

  • bhouston an hour ago

    He is probably going after Ro Khanna, who comes across as a pretty decent rep (he and Massie got the Epstein files released):

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ro_Khanna

    Based on this warning from Garry to Ro re: wealth tax

    https://finviz.com/news/277038/y-combinators-garry-tan-warns...

    So this appears to be all about the wealth tax and taken down anyone who supports it.

    AIPAC is also mad at Ro so it seems that Garry Tan can find common cause with them:

    https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1GRXZqcQiU/?mibextid=wwXIfr

    • khuey an hour ago

      Ironically Ro Khanna was the tech backed candidate a decade ago when he ran against Mike Honda.

    • RobotToaster 31 minutes ago

      Has anyone checked the Epstein files for his name?

    • givemeethekeys an hour ago

      Where does the money go? Facebook and Google ads?

      • bhouston an hour ago

        A lot of it does. And it also goes to companies making inauthentic social media content. This is what modern election campaigns are.

        • RobotToaster 37 minutes ago

          How many AI deepfake companies has y-combinator invested in?

    • tw04 an hour ago

      Which would be hilarious if it weren’t so infuriating.

      All they can talk about is how they’re all going to leave the state if it happens, but then are more than willing to try to spend more stopping it than they would just contributing their fair share in taxes.

      Don’t like it? Great, leave - but stop trying to buy elections.

      • CuriouslyC 37 minutes ago

        YC is always talking about how important SF is (due to hand waiving reasons like "innovation environment," I would find it highly ironic if a wealth tax was all it took to get top YC people to abandon the state.

      • kadabra9 an hour ago

        Everyone loves deciding what their "fair share" of other people's net worth (not even income!) is.

        Sorry, but the state just confiscating 5% of someone's net worth (unrealized or not) is absolute madness, and rightfully opens up questions about slippery slope, how "temporary" they claim this to be, and so on.

        It's not surprising they are leaving the state or using their resources to try to stop it.

        • bhouston an hour ago

          Your statement is ignoring the systematic growing inequality in the US between the ultra wealthy and everyone else. And the use of those funds to influence politics (because of Citizens United, etc) to create polices that benefit themselves - it is for the ultra wealthy a virtuous circle:

          https://inequality.org/facts/wealth-inequality/

          This is not a normal state of affairs.

          • kadabra9 an hour ago

            This tax would do effectively nothing to address growing inequality between billionaires and everyone else.

            • mjamesaustin 10 minutes ago

              I see, so you're suggesting 5% is not enough? I'm listening...

    • 8note an hour ago

      oof, that incidentally also means he's about hiding the epstein files and avoiding accountability for its villains

    • learingsci an hour ago

      A wealth tax is not an obviously great idea. It’s worth having a better public debate on that topic.

      • bhouston an hour ago

        I bet Garry Tan will find that going after him for the wealth tax won’t poll well so he will find a different angle. Thus it won’t be a debate about a wealth tax, it will just be the standard make your opponent look bad in order to unseat him.

        For example: https://nypost.com/2026/02/01/us-news/stunning-number-of-cal...

        • terminalshort 35 minutes ago

          Ok, so what is the problem here? Why can't Gary Tan engage in standard political activity like anybody else? This is his fundamental right as a citizen of a democracy.

          • bhouston 21 minutes ago

            The issue is unlimited spending. Rich people can tilt the political system to benefit themselves by their ability to spend unlimited and then push for things that enrich themselves like lower taxes that doesn’t benefit society at large.

            The biggest example of this in the US is the health system that is more expensive and has worse outcomes than other countries. There is a huge and growing gap in the us between ultra wealthy and the rest of the population and it is a virtuous circle for the ultra wealthy with their ability to spend unlimited in politics.

          • amarcheschi 22 minutes ago

            The more money you have, the more means you have to engage in political activity not like anybody else but with a weight which far exceeds one

            • terminalshort 18 minutes ago

              So what? The constitution guarantees you equal rights under the law and an equal vote in each election. It does not guarantee you equal political influence. Same as you have the right to freedom of speech and of the press, but you are not guaranteed an audience.

              • amarcheschi 16 minutes ago

                So some people might feel slightly annoyed by this.

                I don't know if you don't find this absurd, but a bunch of pedophile protecting people have shaped the actual presidency and are continuing to do so. Feeling slightly annoyed is the least offensive way I could put it

          • toraway 19 minutes ago

            Who's stopping him? Are we all required to be cheering him on for it too?

            • terminalshort 15 minutes ago

              No one is stopping him, but they would be if the people in this comment section had their way. You are absolutely not required to cheer him on, and in fact you have the right to oppose him. But that isn't happening here. Nobody in these comments is exercising their first amendment rights to argue against any of his political opinions. They are using their first amendment rights to argue that the government should use its monopoly to restrict Gary Tan's right to make his argument at all.

              • toraway a few seconds ago

                I am not seeing that anywhere from the OP in the chain of comments you replied to.

      • sa-code an hour ago

        I’ve heard about a borrowing tax as an alternative, because that’s when paper money becomes spending money

        I would love to see that discussed

        • terminalshort 33 minutes ago

          I want to do some improvements on my house. So I take out a home equity loan. Oops! Actually since my house is worth $500K more than when I bought it, now I have to pay $100K to the government since the gain is now realized by using the asset as collateral!

      • pbreit an hour ago

        The only reasonable argument I can think of is that the fantastic wealth accumulated at the top was substantially driven by the $37 trillion of debt the USA finds itself in. And it needs to be clawed back somehow.

        • terminalshort 31 minutes ago

          It's actually much simpler than that. We need to pay down the debt, and because the rich have most of the money they are going to need to do most of the paying down whether or not they directly are responsible for it or benefited from it. It's simple math. But what does this have to do with a wealth tax? The entire concept is stupid. Income an capital gains rates can be increased.

      • asveikau an hour ago

        I feel like public discussion of this has been outgoing since around 12 years ago when Thomas Piketty's book came out.

      • mattmanser an hour ago

        I don't really see any other solution, can you explain it?

        The ultra-rich are taking too great a share of every nations wealth. And they keep taking more.

        Taxes are the only option to redistribute wealth.

        Or are you talking about enabling strong unions and anti-monopoly laws with teeth to reverse the growth?

        As I doubt Garry's in favour of that either.

        • terminalshort 30 minutes ago

          Taking? From who? They got this money by appropriation and not by mutually agreed upon transactions?

    • zozbot234 37 minutes ago

      A wealth tax is a great idea if your goal is to make everyone a whole lot poorer especially in the longer term, and not very much otherwise. It's pretty much saying that you want pure populist envy to be the priority, over and to the detriment of long-term prosperity.

  • piskov 26 minutes ago

    > dark-money group to influence California politics

    Does this mean what I think it means: basically legalized bribery?

  • vincentjiang an hour ago

    hate to see that tech leaders getting into politics

    • spicymaki an hour ago

      Well on the bright side it's a complete mask off moment for the tech community. I think it is good for these people to expose themselves to the public. They will show you who they really are if you let them.

      “If the broad light of day could be let in upon men’s actions, it would purify them as the sun disinfects”. -- Louis Brandeis

      • skybrian an hour ago

        For one person in the tech community. And apparently he was already "out?" (The article goes into his history in supporting political causes.)

    • diggyhole an hour ago

      Or do you hate that their politics don't align with yours?

      • shimman an hour ago

        Everyone should hate people that believe in undemocratic principles.

        • CamperBob2 43 minutes ago

          Hot take: what has democracy done for us lately? Besides re-electing Donald Trump?

          If something can't go on forever, it will eventually stop. That applies to any system that gives stupid people the same political voice as the rest of the electorate. I mean, it seems kind of obvious, doesn't it?

          • amarcheschi 38 minutes ago

            Ask yourself which class can gain something by having trump as president rather than any other democrat

            (it's not the working class)

            • CamperBob2 12 minutes ago

              Exactly. So why'd the "working class" vote for him?

              • amarcheschi a minute ago

                Because the ones owning social medias, newspapers (and whatnot) pushed heavily for it

      • saubeidl an hour ago

        Their very existence doesn't align with my politics, or any decent person's politics for that matter.

        • pbreit an hour ago

          Smart, successful people offering products and services that lots of people want does not align with your politics? What are your politics?

          • saubeidl 42 minutes ago

            People extracting value from labor to enrich themselves at the expense of society and then using those riches to further corrupt society, to the point where a few dudes own most of the country does not align with my politics.

            That's why I'm a socialist and I would invite anyone who thinks things might not be going in the right direction to consider that as well.

      • micromacrofoot an hour ago

        it's that their money buys outsized influence and erodes the concept of democracy

      • estearum an hour ago

        Nah, I don't even know what Garry's politics are. I hate that there's so much money in politics in general.

    • pbreit an hour ago

      Why is that?

    • ajross an hour ago

      I'd prefer to see more of them do so, personally. That said, to watch Tan wading into a local fistfight about school curriculum and housing zoning and whatnot in the age of ICE abduction, targetted political prosecution and wanton macroeconomic regulatory chaos seems... frustrating.

      I mean, I kinda agree with him about most of the centrist stuff. But really, Gary? This is what you need to be spending your money and time on?

      • bhouston an hour ago

        Garry seems motivated by being against a wealth tax and this is also likely the reason other ultra rich people will donate to his dark money fund:

        https://finviz.com/news/277038/y-combinators-garry-tan-warns...

        • awnird 31 minutes ago

          Garry is chummy with musk and trump. His motivation here is to protect the pedophile class.

      • terminalshort an hour ago

        Wow. So it's not even good enough that he agrees with you. You demand that he also prioritizes in the same order as you?

  • diggyhole 41 minutes ago

    Garry has tweeted about the violence his peers have had to endure in SF so I don't blame him for putting his money where is mouth is.

    • CyLith 33 minutes ago

      Perhaps he should reflect on why they deserve this violence, instead of giving people more reason for violence against him.

      • diggyhole 27 minutes ago

        An Indian American man deserved to be smashed in the back of the head with a hammer?

  • touwer an hour ago

    Money is like poison in politics

  • driverdan an hour ago

    Every single article I looked at seems to be generated from a tweet. The latest is a blatant attempt at promoting one of YC's privacy invasive investments Flock: https://garryslist.org/posts/atlanta-solved-35-homicides-wit...

    That tells you all you need to know about how trustworthy the site is.

    • magicalist 16 minutes ago

      > The privacy absolutists will tell you that license plate cameras are “Orwellian.” But here’s what I know: unsolved crime means more innocent people get hurt and maimed and killed. Flock has audit trails. There’s accountability. The people who benefit from keeping murders unsolved aren’t victims—they’re criminals.

      jesus christ. assuming he's not going to start syndicating this, who is this even pandering to?

      • toraway 8 minutes ago

          The only question is whether your city has the courage to use it.
        
          Take Action
        
          Share this with your city officials—demand they adopt Flock Safety
        
        Unless I missed it they don't even bother with the pretense of disclosing his financial self-interest in promoting Flock anywhere on the site.
  • 0gs an hour ago

    shouldn't we call this bright money

  • davidw 35 minutes ago

    Setting aside the merits of this, complaining about big money in politics while your site proudly displays a Twitter link is a bit of a face-palm.

  • Spivak an hour ago

    At this point it's just boring to have another rich asshole using government to protect their own interests. There's no substance or principle to it, it's just whatever policies makes CA more favorable to other rich assholes.

  • learingsci an hour ago

    Save us, please!

  • rvz an hour ago

    This looks concerning but I'm withholding judgement for now so that he can clarify this first on his side instead of jumping into conclusions.

  • johnea 2 hours ago

    Well, this is helpful.

    Now I can refer to this list to let me know who, and what, to vote against...

  • nektro 37 minutes ago

    > “I want to work to ensure Californians know the importance of investment and entrepreneurship to our state’s current and future economy,” Tan wrote.

    I know a dog whistle when i see one, didn't have to read much further but did anyway.

  • text0404 an hour ago

    "Garry's List" is just straight up AI slop. This is a window into the coming AI-enabled era of astroturfing from wealthy individuals for their pet causes.

    • piker an hour ago

      Guess we know where those 15KLOCs/day went.

  • drcongo an hour ago

    Cool.

  • seattle_spring an hour ago

    He's been posting extremely stilted political content lately, in addition to unchecked AI evangelism.

    I really, really hate that our future has ended up in the hands of people like him, Andreessen, Thiel, Musk, etc.

  • saubeidl an hour ago

    This won't end well for the oligarchs. Just ask the Ancien Regime or the Zar what happens if you keep pushing too hard.

  • SirensOfTitan an hour ago

    To me, tech entrepreneurship looks more like some form of "lemon socialism." It feels more centrally planned than ever, and a company's success has much more to do with your relationships with capital than anything else. It's why we're seeing so much money invested into a bunch of similar takes on AI. Founders with a real vision of the future aren't really accepted into VC that has almost wholly accepted the FOMO strategy of investment.

    I used to hold a lot of respect for Paul Graham and his essays, but I've realized his stances on things are pretty elementary, and largely come back to his ego or wealth management. People like Graham and Tan don't seem to really care about human flourishing, and they certainly don't seem to have any coherent vision of the future. Graham, like Andreessen, was technically good enough during a veritable tech gold rush, and Graham's lieutenants like Tan and Altman were lucky more than anything--just in the right place at the right time versus having started anything of value.

    I am *absolutely* cynical and jaded when it comes to tech nowadays, so no need to call me out there. These people remind me of the high modernists, that tech will solve all problems, and we don't have to care too much as to how we solve those problems. Just handwave, and AI will solve all problems. But I think how we solve problems matters, and the entrepreneurship meritocracy that Tan and Graham allude to does not exist, and it never did.

    I just find it abhorrent that while 15% of American households are food insecure, a company like Anthropic spent millions on a superbowl ad just lamenting OpenAI's ad strategy. Or that the Trump administration dropped a FTC case against Pepsi and Walmart for colluding to price out grocery competition. Or that Facebook and Google have been shown to have pushed for apps to addict people to their slop content. Or that tech capex this year alone rivals the Louisiana Purchase or the amount America spent on building out the railroads[1].

    We're not solving the right problems because capital is entirely disconnected from the every day reality of Americans in this country. But by all means, let's aim to replace 50% of white collar workers with AI and handwave that prices will come down.

    [1]: https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/ai-spending-tech-companies-compa...

    • jacquesm an hour ago

      It's pretty simple: you don't get to that kind of wealth without having a few screws loose in the ethics department. There are some exceptions but they are just there to confirm the rule.

  • rrkajh an hour ago

    It won't work. The Trump admin has so thoroughly betrayed its voters that independent voters no longer want anything to do with billionaires like the all-in people lying to them for 4 years before an election.

    You had your chance, it is gone now.

  • phendrenad2 an hour ago

    It's way too early to fix California. The average California voter, which HN is a good sampling of by the way, really believes that California is fine, and that there's no corruption or grift, and that they can tax billionaires more without them simply leaving the state (because CA is magical and unique (it's the 4th largest economy in the world, don't you know!) and they'll come crawling back to be a part of it). It's going to take awhile for people to change. As the saying goes "science progresses one funeral at a time". People put ideology above the evidence in front of their eyes. (That "The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command" Orwell quote is making the rounds, which is ironic because most people don't need a party to tell them to disbelieve uncomfortable facts!) We have to wait for a new generation to grow up with the visible corruption to fully internalize it. Then it can be fixed. I can't help but think that Tan's efforts would be better spent trying to get a startup scene going somewhere where you can park your car without getting the windows smashed.

  • theideaofcoffee 27 minutes ago

    Yet another terrible step toward total oligarchy. Get the fuck out of politics, tech ghouls.

  • xyst an hour ago

    Garry Tan desperately wants to become Elon Musk/Peter Thiel so badly. Quite pathetic.

    • sngltoon 30 minutes ago

      The billionaire scum class really want to make guillotines great again. Keep pushing us.

  • diego_moita an hour ago

    Among the many weird things that the U.S. have but real democratic countries don't, the most promiscuous of them is this flow of private money into politics.

    Campaign financing, U.S. style, is just legalized bribing. In any healthy democracy it would be illegal. In the U.S. is just the way things are.

    • mtrovo 42 minutes ago

      Watching things from outside, it feels like the US is a pay-to-win democracy. It's hard to say where exactly the line between lobbying vs. corruption is drawn.

    • ergocoder 34 minutes ago

      Back in my country, the bribes are illegal and mostly untraceable.

      Money will go into politics. Nobody can stop this, and it should be out in the open and traceable.

      Obviously, no bribe at all is the best, but is this happening anywhere?

    • its-summertime 33 minutes ago
  • rasengan an hour ago

    I don't know if I agree or not with his views, but the fact that he's moving from complaining about something, to doing something about his beliefs, has convinced me to move from a negative to a significantly positive view of him, as a person; to reiterate, regardless of whether I agree with said views.

    The will to fight for what one believes in - I think we can all agree that is an admirable human trait that would result, for those who do follow his views, in him being labeled as a hero and defender of people's rights.

    Bravo, Garry.

    • elliotto an hour ago

      Bravo Garry, net worth $x00m, having the integrity to go after public school teachers.

    • amarcheschi an hour ago

      Mussolini moved to doing something different after directing the socialist journal Avanti

      It just wasn't for the wellbeing of the rest of Italy what he did

      • mhitza an hour ago

        You know it just polarizes, and nothing more, when bringing up fascists as a counter argument when it is not punctually relevant.

        • amarcheschi an hour ago

          I'm not making a comparison, the opposite. Saying that "somebody doing something for its beliefs is good period" means nothing

  • woah an hour ago

    The Mission Local is a good source for hyperlocal Bay Area news, but it does have a strong SF leftist/progressive political tilt in most of its articles, and Gary Tan is a favorite boogieman for these types. Here's what they have to say about his malign influence in the article:

    > But the operation is also a media venture: Garry’s List started with a blog pillorying public-sector unions as “special interests,” attacking the ongoing teachers’ strike, and denouncing the proposed billionaire tax.

    - Public sector unions are special interests. This is a plain fact.

    - The current teacher's strike in San Francisco, even if it succeeds, will only push the district into insolvency, prompting a state takeover. The state will then cut much more aggressively. Maybe this would be a good thing though, although probably not what the union intended. Advocates of the strike are literally demanding the district spend its reserves on a couple years of raises.

    - I'm certainly no billionaire, but the proposed tax will do nothing more than push the extremely small and mobile group of billionaires to take their business elsewhere. It's unlikely to raise tax revenues over the long run.

    • BugsJustFindMe 38 minutes ago

      > the proposed tax will do nothing more than push the extremely small and mobile group of billionaires to take their business elsewhere

      This is often claimed but has yet to be shown to actually be true. Billionaires want to live in the nicest places with the best amenities just like everyone else.

      But let's pretend for the moment that it is true. Good. Billionaires are not a net positive influence anywhere.

    • biophysboy an hour ago

      The last two points might happen - how do you know? I often see "it will backfire" as a counterpoint w/o any evidence.