Palantir has a serious problem. You can tell by the way their CEO Alex Karp just positioned AI as threatening humanities-trained workers and empowering vocational ones.
That’s exactly backwards. And it’s political. He’s trying to prevent people from pulling the curtain back on his mistakes.
Here’s one. Palantir will tell you they committed an extra-judicial assassination of the man in a purple hat at the crack of dawn. What they can’t tell you is that man was innocent and was wearing a white hat that simply reflected the purple hue of a rising sun.
True story. The humanities-trained analyst catches that. The machine doesn’t. The customer who’s been told humanities are for losers never even thinks to check.
AI is a text machine. It generates competent prose, summarizes arguments, produces passable analysis. Someone with weak humanities skills can now produce humanities-grade output with minimal effort. The floor rises. A trades worker who could never write a policy memo can now generate one. That’s genuine empowerment, and it flows toward exactly the people Karp claims to champion, pulling them toward humanities rather than away from it.
Meanwhile, the skilled knowledge workers whose value proposition was “I think clearly and write well” discover that the market price for clear thinking and good writing just collapsed. AI doesn’t do higher-order thought. And most knowledge work hasn’t been higher-order thought. It was competent pattern execution dressed up as expertise. AI exposes that gap brutally.
So the real disruption runs directly opposite to Karp’s pitch. The humanities-trained workers doing low-level routine cognitive labor lose. The vocationally-trained workers who adopt AI as a literacy tool gain. The technology is fundamentally a language democratizer because humanities become more important, not less.
But here’s what Karp will never say: the democratization only works when someone trains on how to evaluate what comes out.
Garbage Business
AI output without humanities judgment is fluent garbage. It reads smoothly. It sounds authoritative. It is, on average, very wrong in ways that require trained critical thinking to detect. The humanities aren’t threatened by AI. They’re the quality control layer. Editorial judgment, contextual reasoning, the ability to distinguish a coherent argument from a plausible-sounding one: these are the skills that make AI output worth anything at all.
By positioning humanities as the enemy of the working class, Karp ensures they never develop the critical framework to evaluate what AI gives them. They get the tool but not the judgment. Which means they need Palantir to be the judgment layer, with no accountability. That’s not a side effect. That’s the low quality product known as Palantir.
They will tell you to bomb 1,000s of high-value targets 24/7 and when the fog clears shrug at a closed strait and a triple-tapped school full of dead children.
Imagine a steam engine manufacturer who campaigns against thermodynamics education because physicists vote for the wrong party. The engine still runs. It just runs very badly, exploding and killing workers, and only the manufacturer knows why. They’ll sell you the fix instead of reducing the need for fixes.
The steam engine didn’t become transformative because miners got better at mining. It became transformative when social scientists understood labor, markets, thermodynamics, systems. The resistance to change came from mine owners who liked their workers poor, ignorant and dependent. Karp deflates and blocks the necessary science to make workers better. He actively degrades the input that makes his own technology functional, then positions himself as the indispensable intermediary. The cage is tracking workers and keeping them illiterate in the one discipline that would let them see the cage.
Radically Wrong
Thomas Impelluso writing in The Humanist catches the surface move: Karp promises working-class people economic power, delivers employment under total surveillance. He frames it as gender war, misogyny as bait, misandry as extraction. That’s radical politics as far as it goes. But the deeper tell is the specific target. Karp attacked humanities because they’re the disciplines that teach people to recognize that what he’s doing is wrong.
A working-class person with a strong humanities education is Palantir’s worst customer. Imagine someone who can read the output, spot the errors, question the framing, and ask who benefits. A working-class person told that humanities are for Democratic women because real skills don’t need higher education? That’s a cog who takes what the machine gives and is grateful because they don’t know better.
The technology democratizes language. Karp is selling a flawed engine, burning the manuals, and planning to get rich on cleaning up the disasters he creates.
Every authoritarian industrialist in history has done this. Krupp told German workers the socialists were their enemy, then worked them to death in his factories. Henry Ford told American workers the Jews were their problem, then fought unionization with private police. The structure is always the same: name an enemy that isn’t you, claim the workers as your people, extract their labor under your terms.

Karp is doing Ford’s playbook with a PhD. The enemy is humanities-educated Democrats. The promise is economic restoration. The product is surveillance infrastructure that makes the workers more legible to management than any Pinkerton could have dreamed. Ford at least built something the workers could drive home. Karp builds something that drives them.



