My Dinner With Andreessen
Billionaires I have known: Part One of a three-part series
BY RICK PERLSTEIN APRIL 24, 2024
SNIP: A remarkable story from @rickperlstein about a night he shared with Marc Andreessen, who said of rural small-town Americans who didn't leave their communities, "Im glad theres OxyContin and video games to keep those people quiet"
Recently, I read about venture capitalist Marc Andreessen putting his 12,000-square-foot mansion in Atherton, California, which has seven fireplaces, up for sale for $33.75 million. This was done to spend more time, one supposes, at the $177 million home he owns in Paradise Cove, California; or the $34 million one he bought beside it; or the $44.5 million one in a place called Escondido Beach. Upon reading this, I realized it was time to stop procrastinating and tell you all a story Ive been meaning to set down for a long time now about the time I visited that house (the cheap $33.75 million one, I mean). Strictly on a need-to-know basis. Because you really need to know how deeply twisted some of these plutocrats who run our society truly are.
It was 2017, and a YIMBY activist invited me to talk about my book Nixonland with his book club, which also happened to be Marc Andreessens book club. They offered a free flight and hotel; I accepted. We met in that house. I was vaguely aware of Andreessen as the guy who invented the first web browser, a socially useful accomplishment by any measure and a story I had long kept in the back of my mind as an outstanding proof text that useful invention often flourishes best when government subsidizes it, socialism-stylegiven that Andreessen had created it while a student at a public institution, the University of Illinois. Then I boned up on what he was up to now, courtesy of a gargantuan 13,000-word profile from two years earlier in The New Yorker.
Andreessen, I learned, was Tomorrows Advance Man. He superintended the newest and most unusual venture capital firm on Menlo Parks Sand Hill Road. He seethes with beliefs and is afire to reorder life as we know it. His enthusiasms included replacing money with cryptocurrency; replacing cooked food with a scheme called, yes, Soylent, and boosting the now-invisible Oculus virtual reality headset.
https://prospect.org/power/2024-04-24-my-dinner-with-andreessen/
Voltaire2
(13,214 posts)I don't know how we do that, certainly the old school 'topping off' is not the answer, but it needs to be done.