BOSTON: Tech billionaires such as Bill Gates1xbet, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk are not just among the richest people in human history. They also are exceptionally powerful – socially, culturally and politically. While this is partly a reflection of the social status that our society attaches to wealth in general, that is not the whole story.
What matters even more than simple wealth is that these particular billionaires are viewed as entrepreneurial geniuses who exhibit unique levels of creativity, daring, foresight and expertise on a wide range of topics. Add the fact that many of them control major means of communication – namely, the key social media platforms – and you have something almost unparalleled in recent history.
The image of the rich, brave businessman who transforms the world can be traced back at least to the robber barons of the Gilded Age. But one of the main sources of its contemporary popular appeal is Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged, whose protagonist, John Galt, strives to recreate capitalism through the sheer force of his idealism and will.
While Rand’s novel has long held canonical status in the minds of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and libertarian-leaning politicians, the influence of its central archetype is hardly confined to those circles. From Bruce Wayne (Batman) and Tony Stark (Iron Man) to Darius Tanz in the TV series Salvation1xbet, rich, technologically savvy innovators who save the world from impending disaster are a staple of our popular culture.
The White House in Washington, United States, Mar 6, 2021. (Reuters/Erin Scott/File Photo)