Curtis Yarvin


Curtis Guy Yarvin, also known by the pen name Mencius Moldbug, is an American far-right blogger. Yarvin and his ideas are often associated with the alt-right. From 2007 to 2014 he authored a blog called "Unqualified Reservations" which argued that American democracy is a failed experiment, and that it should be replaced by monarchy or corporate governance. He is known, along with fellow "neo-reactionary" Nick Land, for developing the anti-egalitarian and anti-democratic ideas behind the Dark Enlightenment.
Yarvin has links with the website Breitbart News, the former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, and with the billionaire investor Peter Thiel. Yarvin's ideas have been particularly influential among radical libertarians, and the public discourses of prominent investors like Thiel have echoed Yarvin's project of seceding from the US to establish tech-CEO dictatorships. Journalist Mike Wendling has called Yarvin "the Alt right's favorite philosophy instructor". Bannon, in particular, has read and admired his work.
In 2002 Yarvin founded the Urbit computer platform. In 2019 he resigned from Tlon, the company he co-founded to manage and develop Urbit.

Biography

Early life and education

Curtis Yarvin was born in 1973 from a highly-educated, liberal and secular family. He is half Jewish from his father's side. Yarvin spent part of his childhood abroad, mainly on the island of Cyprus. In 1985, he returned to the US and entered Johns Hopkins' longitudinal Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth. He attended Brown University from 1988, graduating from Brown in 1992, then dropped out of the Computer Science Division of UC Berkeley. He states on his blog that his parents and stepfather were career officers in United States Foreign Service, and that he returned from abroad to attend public high school in Columbia, Maryland at age 12.
In the 1980–1990s, Yarvin was shaped by the libertarian tech culture of the Silicon Valley. Online, he pursued however his study of right-wing thought, reading numerous prominent thinkers of mainstream American conservatism. The libertarian University of Tennessee law professor Glenn Reynolds introduced him to the radical libertarian tradition, especially Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard. The rejection of empiricism by Mises and the Austrian School, who favored instead "deductive reasoning from assumptions about human behavior and economic principles", influenced Yarvin's own "engineering mind-set" and vision of societies.

Neo-reactionary blogger

Yarvin's reading of Thomas Carlyle convinced him that libertarianism was a doomed project without the inclusion of authoritarianism, and Hans-Hermann Hoppe's 2001 book marked Yarvin's first break with democracy. Another of his influences was James Burnham, who thought that "Real" politics occurred through the actions and power manipulation of the elites, beneath what he called the apparent democratic or socialist rhetoric. In the 2000s, the failures of US-led nation buildings in Iraq and Afghanistan confirmed Yarvin's antidemocratic views, the federal response to the 2008 financial crisis strengthened his libertarian convictions, and the election of Barack Obama as US president reinforced his belief that history inevitably progresses towards left-leaning societies.
In 2007, he began the web blog "Unqualified Reservations" to promote his political vision. Yarvin largely stopped updating his blog in 2013, when he began to focus on his tech startup Urbit, and announced in April 2016 that "Unqualified Reservations" had "completed its mission."
In 2015, his invitation to speak at the Strange Loop programming conference about Urbit was rescinded following complaints made by other attendees. In 2016, his invitation to the LambdaConf functional programming conference resulted in the withdrawal of five speakers, two subconferences, and several sponsors.
In 2019, Yarvin stopped writing under the name Mencius Moldbug and began writing under his own name when "The American Mind" announced Yarvin would write five essays to "set the record straight on his thinking, his critics, and his radical challenge to all political frameworks competing for dominance in American life." As yet Yarvin has written two essays for "The American Mind." In May 2020 Yarvin announced he was writing a book called Gray Mirror Of The Nihilist Prince.

Views

Dark Enlightenment

Yarvin believes that the real seat of political power in the United States is an amalgam of established universities and the mainstream press, an entity he calls "the Cathedral". According to him, a so-called "Brahmin" social class dominates the American society, preaching democratic and progressive values to the masses. The basic assumption of Yarvin and the Dark Enlightenment movement is that humans desire power, which is uselessly fragmented by the Cathedral's commitment to equality and justice, eroding at the same time order in society.
He argues for a "neo-cameralist" philosophy based on Frederick the Great of Prussia's "cameralist" administrative mode. In Yarvin's view, inefficient, wasteful democratic governments should be replaced with sovereign joint-stock corporations whose "shareholders" elect an executive with total power, but who must serve at their pleasure. The executive, unencumbered by liberal-democratic procedures, could rule efficiently much like a CEO-monarch. Yarvin admires Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping for his pragmatic and market-oriented authoritarianism, and the city-state of Singapore as an example of a successful authoritarian regime. He sees the US as soft on crime, dominated by economic and democratic delusions.
Yarvin justifies authoritarianism on libertarian grounds, contending that the division of political sovereignty eventually expands the scope of the state, whereas strong governments with clear hierarchies remain minimal and narrowly focused. According to scholar Joshua Tait, "Moldbug imagines a radical libertarian utopia with maximum freedom in all things except politics." In fact, many of his views on social issues are deeply influenced by libertarianism. He has favored same-sex marriage, freedom of religion, private use of drugs, and written against race- or gender-based discriminatory laws, although Tait reminds that "he self-consciously proposed private welfare and prison reforms that resembled slavery."
Drawing on computer metaphors, Yarvin contends that society needs a "hard reset" or a "rebooting", not a series of gradual political reforms. However, he has distanced his movement from "violent or harmless, legal or illegal" activism. He advocates instead "the Steel Rule of Passivism", reasoning that progressivism is nourished by right-wing opposition and "starves" without a necessary enemy.
Yarvin originally called his concept of aligning property rights with political power "formalism", the formal recognition of realities of power, a term Yarvin said to be "borrowed from legal formalism, which is basically the same idea in more modest attire". The label "neo-reactionary" was applied to Yarvin's ideas by Arnold Kling in 2010 and adopted by Yarvin's followers; Yarvin has said he prefers the label "restorationist". His ideas have also been described by Dylan Matthews of Vox as "neo-monarchist".

Nazi Germany and WWII

Under his Moldbug pseudonym, Yarvin gave a talk about "rebooting" the American government at the 2012 BIL Conference. He used it to advocate the acronym "RAGE", which he defined as "Retire All Government Employees". Acting as a provocateur, he highlighted perceived discrepancies in the popular attitudes toward fascism and communism, identifying what he felt were flaws in the accepted "World War II mythology" and alluding to the idea that Hitler's invasions were acts of self-defense. He argued these discrepancies were pushed by America's "ruling communists", who invented political correctness as an "extremely elaborate mechanism for persecuting racists and fascists". "If Americans want to change their government", he said, "they're going to have to get over their dictator phobia".

Controversy

Views on race

Yarvin's opinions have been described as racist, with his writings interpreted as supportive of slavery, including the belief that whites have higher IQs than blacks for genetic reasons. Yarvin himself maintains that he is not a racist because, while he doubts that "all races are equally smart", the notion "that people who score higher on IQ tests are in some sense superior human beings" is "creepy". He also disputes being an "outspoken advocate for slavery", though he has argued that some races are more suited to slavery than others. "It should be obvious that, although I am not a white nationalist, I am not exactly allergic to the stuff", Yarvin wrote in a post that linked approvingly to Steve Sailer, Jared Taylor, and other racialists. In 2009, he wrote that since US civil right programs were "applied to populations with recent hunter-gatherer ancestry and no great reputation for sturdy moral fiber", the result was "absolute human garbage."
Tait notes that "Moldbug's racial comments suggest a broader trend: the anonymity of the internet allows him and others who have followed in his wake to revel in taboo language, ideas, and activities. Violating social norms is a kind of liberation for Moldbug: entertaining these ideas is to break from the Cathedral."

Relations with the Alt Right

Yarvin came to public attention in February 2017 when Politico magazine reported that Steve Bannon, who served as White House Chief Strategist under U.S. President Donald Trump, read Yarvin's blog and that Yarvin "has reportedly opened up a line to the White House, communicating with Bannon and his aides through an intermediary". The story was picked up by other magazines and newspapers, including The Atlantic, The Independent, and Mother Jones. Yarvin jokingly told The Atlantic that his White House contact was the Twitter user Bronze Age Pervert, though to Vox he denied being in contact with Bannon in any way. Yarvin later gave a copy of Bronze Age Pervert's book Bronze Age Mindset to Michael Anton, a former senior national security official in the Trump administration.
Yarvin and other Dark Enlightenment thinkers have tried to publicly distance themselves from the Alt Right. However, a private message he sent to Milo Yiannopoulos, then a Breitbart reporter, suggests that this may be a tactical move. Yarvin counseled Yiannopoulos to deal with neo-Nazis "the way some perfectly tailored high-communist NYT reporter handles a herd of greasy anarchist hippies. Patronizing contempt."
Tait describes "Unqualified Reservations" as a "'highbrow' predecessor and later companion to the transgressive anti-'politically correct' metapolitics of nebulous online communities like 4chan and /pol/."

Radical libertarianism

According to Tait, "Moldbug's relationship with the investor-entrepreneur Thiel is his most important connection." Peter Thiel was an investor in Yarvin's startup Tlon and gave $100,000 to Tlon's co-founder John Burnham in 2011. In 2016, Yarvin privately asserted that had been "coaching Thiel".
Thiel and libertarian investor Balaji S. Srinivasan have echoed Yarvin's ideas of techno-corporate cameralism. Thiel has written in a 2009 essay that he "no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible... Since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women—two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians—have rendered the notion of 'capitalist democracy' into an oxymoron", and Srinivasan advocated in a 2013 speech a "society run by Silicon Valley an opt-in society, ultimately outside the US, run by technology."