Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is a Dangerous Fantasy
Peter Thiel recently generated headlines with his rambling diatribes about the Antichrist. Thiel’s lurid, apocalyptic view of world politics may be ludicrous or even deranged, but his wealth and power mean that we can’t afford to ignore it.

Tech billionaire Peter Thiel has spent the last two years traveling the world speaking about how the Antichrist threatens global order. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)
It has been widely reported that the US tech billionaire Peter Thiel recently gave a series of rambling lectures to a private audience in San Francisco in which he laid out his apocalyptic reading of world politics. These lectures mark the culmination of two years of Thiel traveling the world speaking at Catholic universities, at international conferences, and on right-wing podcasts about how the Antichrist threatens global order.
While Thiel’s discourse may lack clarity and coherence, it is still profoundly significant in view of the political and economic power concentrated in his hands. Yet perhaps more important still is what Thiel’s comments on the Antichrist tell us about the convergence of Christian apocalypticism, the tech sector’s economic dominance, and US imperialism.
While some have associated Thiel’s vision with what they refer to as “end-times fascism,” it is more useful to characterize what he advances as an apocalyptic geopolitics — a simplified remapping of global politics onto the spiritual coordinates of salvation and damnation. Thiel’s apocalyptic geopolitics seeks to overcome internal social contradictions by projecting them onto an external evil, at once foreign and metaphysical.