Elon Musk’s grandpa drew that map I think. He was part of a ‘strange’ movement (at the time) that wanted to integrate humans and technology.
Joshua N. Haldeman
…… strange………..please read the last sentence below a couple times…….
BRAVE AI:
Joshua N. Haldeman, the maternal grandfather of Elon Musk, was a prominent figure in the Technocracy movement during the 1930s and 1940s, which proposed a radical reorganization of society based on technical expertise rather than democratic governance. He was the head of the Canadian branch of Technocracy Incorporated, a group that advocated for a single continental entity known as the Technate of America, envisioned to stretch from Greenland to the Pacific and include parts of Central America and the Caribbean. This proposed system aimed to replace traditional political institutions with a technocratic elite of engineers and scientists, a vision that critics have linked to authoritarian and fascist ideologies due to its anti-democratic and racially exclusionary underpinnings. Haldeman’s involvement in the movement led to his conviction in Canada for supporting a banned organization in 1943, and he later moved to South Africa, where he became a vocal supporter of apartheid and promoted conspiracy theories, including those found in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
Elon Musk’s grandpa drew that map I think. He was part of a ‘strange’ movement (at the time) that wanted to integrate humans and technology.
Joshua N. Haldeman
…… strange………..please read the last sentence below a couple times…….
BRAVE AI: Joshua N. Haldeman, the maternal grandfather of Elon Musk, was a prominent figure in the Technocracy movement during the 1930s and 1940s, which proposed a radical reorganization of society based on technical expertise rather than democratic governance. He was the head of the Canadian branch of Technocracy Incorporated, a group that advocated for a single continental entity known as the Technate of America, envisioned to stretch from Greenland to the Pacific and include parts of Central America and the Caribbean. This proposed system aimed to replace traditional political institutions with a technocratic elite of engineers and scientists, a vision that critics have linked to authoritarian and fascist ideologies due to its anti-democratic and racially exclusionary underpinnings. Haldeman’s involvement in the movement led to his conviction in Canada for supporting a banned organization in 1943, and he later moved to South Africa, where he became a vocal supporter of apartheid and promoted conspiracy theories, including those found in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.