Will he be the one to break the Demopublican party's grasp on bourgeois elections and continue a new reign of the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie or will he crumble as he pours his money into a failed campaign? Will he split the Right wing of capital? Was it dumb that he didn't just pour finances into the lolbert party instead?
I personally think the most important decisive factor is the image, he needs to make the party symbol a cowboy hat next to an Indian chief war bonnet. Considering how many people drool over symbolism.
>>2378627>—Now they're gonna scream CHATGPT at you
I did a chatgpt thread on siberia about Musk and MrBeast competing in the presidential elections in the future and everyone shat on it (even though it was good)
>>2378644>it won't get past the drawing board, it's a stupid idea put forward by a malding eunuch that was such a tremendous imbecile that he was completely unable to extract any personal benefits from his position You mean the current A with a star thing right? If so yea it looks like a placeholder. My idea of a cowboy hat with an Indian chief war bonnet would work and win him the election, probably dictator for life, super fuhrer of the world, he just has to do exactly as I said with the cowboy hat on the left and the Indian chief war bonnet on the right and it should look a bit like the sandinista christian corporation logo but better.
Picrel, but the Indian chief bonnet should be facing the opposite way and it should be a little less detailed. I guarantee you its Hitler for life if Musk chooses my design after miraculously stumbling across it randomly. The fate of geopolitics depends on this thing I came up with.
>>2378679A bit like this but more detailed.
Its not working right now because its a mockup, when you see the real thing you will be surprised at how well it works.
>>2378836>NEHcelI have no idea what this means. See
>>2378325>You're telling me this isn't the end of the AmeriKKKan empire?The US is very obviously decaying, but this is not the cause of it nor can it accelerate it. This "American Party" will, at best, end up a marginal fascist presence in US politics. Otherwise it'll raise a stink for a year or two and just merge with the Republicans.
Elon Musk Consulted Curtis Yarvin, Right-Wing Thinker, on Third Party
<The two men spoke about Mr. Musk’s push to create the America Party before the midterm elections. Mr. Yarvin has expressed support for a monarchy, along with provocative ideas about racehttps://archive.is/20250709235411/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/09/us/politics/elon-musk-curtis-yarvin-third-party.html
>As Elon Musk studies up on how to start a third political party, among the people from whom he has sought advice is a somewhat surprising choice of consultant: the right-wing blogger Curtis Yarvin, who is perhaps best known for advocating monarchism.
>Mr. Yarvin is one of the most influential thinkers on the so-called tech right, where he has attracted attention for his oft-expressed distaste for traditional American democracy.
>He would not seem to be a source of the kind of expertise that Mr. Musk needs as he pursues his idea for the America Party — Mr. Yarvin is not an expert on the mechanics of creating third parties or on the strategies and intricacies of running third-party campaigns.
>Still, Mr. Musk and Mr. Yarvin spoke late last week about the task ahead, according to two people briefed on the conversation who insisted on anonymity to describe it. A representative for Mr. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. Yarvin declined to be interviewed.Some of Mr. Yarvin’s friends over the years have included technology leaders like Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen, and Vice President JD Vance has cited his writing.
>In talking with Mr. Musk, Mr. Yarvin shared some of his political theories, the people briefed on the conversation said.
>At least some of the two men’s theories have been at odds. Mr. Yarvin has called for the expansion of the use of phone apps for automated voting to increase turnout in elections and decrease the importance of candidate quality. Mr. Musk has repeated false claims of widespread problems with electronic voting machines and said that America should “only do paper ballots, hand-counted.”
>Mr. Yarvin is better known for arguing provocatively that American democracy has been exhausted and that the country would be better off being run by a “C.E.O.” — essentially, a dictator.
>He has also criticized Mr. Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency on the grounds that it did not assume enough power over the federal bureaucracy.Mr. Yarvin’s more controversial pronouncements extend to the subject of race. Critics contend that he has argued for “a hierarchy of races” with his defense of genetic differences between races. “In this house, we believe in science — race science,” he wrote on his blog in December.
>Mr. Yarvin does not have an extensive prior relationship with Mr. Musk. He told The Times in an interview published in January that “I can’t really resist trolling Elon Musk, which might be part of the reason why I’ve never met Elon Musk.”
>Mr. Musk’s decision to reach out to him shows how broadly the billionaire is casting about for advice on his effort to start the new political party before the 2026 midterm elections.
>Mr. Musk, who recently followed Mr. Yarvin on X, has been using the platform to make connections. He briefly talked in recent days about the America Party undertaking with the former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang, another recent X follow, who also founded a third party, Forward.People who know Mr. Musk well say privately that he appears to be serious about the third-party idea, but that it is not clear to them that he has moved beyond pie-in-the-sky thinking to mapping out how to pull it off.
>One immediate challenge for Mr. Musk would be identifying capable allies who are willing to risk retribution from President Trump or from Democrats by engaging in a third-party effort. That could help explain why Mr. Musk may be drawn to heterodox figures like Mr. Yarvin. >>2384070Speed Up the Breakdownhttps://archive.is/20250227052212/https://www.nybooks.com/online/2025/02/15/speed-up-the-breakdown/[…]
>Right-wing accelerationists imagine existing sovereignty shattering into what Yarvin, writing under the pen name Mencius Moldbug, calls a “patchwork” of private entities, ideally governed by what one might call technomonarchies. Existing autocratic polities like Dubai serve as rough prototypes for how nations could be dismantled into “a global spiderweb of tens, even hundreds, of thousands of sovereign and independent mini-countries, each governed by its own joint-stock corporation without regard to the residents’ opinions.” These would be decentralized archipelagoes: fortified nodes in a circuitry still linked by finance, trade, and communication. Think of the year 1000 in Middle Europe but with vertical take-off and landing taxis and Starlink internet. Yarvin expressed the essence of the worldview recently when he enthused over Trump’s proposal to ethnically cleanse the Gaza Strip and rebuild it as a US-backed colony securitized as an asset and sold to investors—as he called it, “the first charter city backed by US legitimacy: Gaza, Inc. Stock symbol: GAZA.”
>Accelerationists do not want merely to make government more efficient, nor simply to prevent it from pursuing redistribution or propagating progressive values. “Speed up the breakdown” is the mantra. Their objective is not to tame or starve the beast but to kill it. Adherents to this extreme ideology are obviously a minority, and it’s not clear at all that Musk himself shares it, let alone Trump. But even if they don’t, DOGE’s actions are helping to unsettle the division between public and private authority. Libertarians have long seen gated communities as laboratories of private government and reminisced about the law and order of the supposedly stateless Western frontier. Musk’s move to reboot the company town by incorporating Starbase, Texas could be seen as a first step toward a world where private actors make laws and jurisdictions that fit their personal needs. […]
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