This author seems to have trouble distinguishing between things she doesn't like and far-right. I don't think downtown SF is "exalt" with far-right inhabitants, and given the largest AI firms are run by a gay man, climate man, and a company who build their brand on left-wing "alignment" I don't think the industry is "exalt" among the right either.
andy99 · 12m ago
Yeah I let that go, it seems to be following Orwell's "fascist means anything we don't like" observation. Otherwise I think there is some grain of truth to the high level observations in article, even if the treatment is pretty shallow.
grammarpolice17 · 7m ago
That's not how the word exalt works, even if you put it in scare quotes.
treyd · 9m ago
It's possible to be gay and be far-right. Most people have some internal conflicts in their personal political positions, if they even think it through that far.
If you're a billionaire, your class interest in protecting capital usually overrides social interests and alliances.
eltondegeneres · 1m ago
> It's possible to be gay and be far-right
It's not uncommon either. Ernst Röhm comes to mind, but there are plenty of contemporary examples too.
quesera · 4m ago
Exalt is a verb. And it's used properly in the article.
I have no idea what you're doing with it.
softwaredoug · 9m ago
It was useful during a talent crunch for CEOs to signal they are left-leaning. In reality their left-leaning stance was just as performative as any cozying-up to Trump, etc.
Molitor5901 · 16m ago
To me it felt a little more about being left behind. I felt this undercurrent of bitterness that the city the author once exalted, through the tech boom, the tech bro era, is leaving her behind, and in its place are the natural progressions of that era she whims nostalgically about.
Like the factory towns of the pre-digital era, when it's good it's great, but when they leave, innovate away, or move on it can leave those behind feeling cheated.
If you're a billionaire, your class interest in protecting capital usually overrides social interests and alliances.
It's not uncommon either. Ernst Röhm comes to mind, but there are plenty of contemporary examples too.
I have no idea what you're doing with it.
Like the factory towns of the pre-digital era, when it's good it's great, but when they leave, innovate away, or move on it can leave those behind feeling cheated.