From Hudson Institute Weekend Reads <[email protected]>
Subject Dr. Alex Karp on AI, America, and the West
Date November 15, 2025 2:00 PM
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Weekend Reads

Palantir CEO Alex Karp Receives Hudson Institute’s 2025 Herman Kahn Award [[link removed]]

Dr. Alex Karp, cofounder and CEO of Palantir, received the Herman Kahn Award [[link removed]] at Hudson’s annual gala last Tuesday.

“Herman thought about the unthinkable, and Alex built a company to make sense of it all,” said Hudson Trustee and Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar [[link removed]] in his introductory remarks.

In his acceptance speech, Dr. Karp discussed why the America is essential for human progress, the importance of meritocracy, and why the United States needs to win the artificial intelligence race with China. His key takeaways are below.

Watch the event, listen to the podcast, or read the transcript here. [[link removed]]

Key Insights

1. The US is uniquely suited to incubate revolutionary technological progress.

“You have a constitutional and moral tethering of exactly what you would need in one specific culture. And that’s this culture. . . . We at Palantir have maximal empathy for Americans—for the right of Americans to be free and for men and women that actually do work.”

2. Meritocracy is America’s strongest tool.

“Meritocracy is the most underestimated, powerful, revolutionary tool that exists in any enterprise ever. . . . The capacity to identify and advance people on a meritocratic base that have capacity to care is the single most revolutionary tool.”

3. The US-China AI competition is winner-take-all.

“You can only explain the promise of AI if you understand and embrace the superiority of America and its culture. Because there are dangers in AI. But the reality is [there are] only two cultures that are going to win in the next year. It’s going to be us or China. . . . We must, must embrace our ability to build it, our ability to own the chips, to own the software, build the large language models, and run very, very quickly.”

Quotes may be edited for clarity and length.

Watch the event, listen to the podcast, or read the transcript here. [[link removed]]

Go Deeper

War Footing [[link removed]]

In First Breakfast [[link removed]], Shyam Sankar [[link removed]] laid out key takeaways from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth’s “ Arsenal of Freedom [[link removed]]” speech at National Defense University and explained what “reformers” in the Pentagon need to do to return the US to a war footing:

Accelerate innovation and delivery by shaking up program offices and enforcing commercial buying.Be a better customer and empower companies that deliver results.Embrace “the primacy of people” by ensuring that authority and accountability for program success flow to a single person with a face and a nameplate on the door.

(For more on Hegseth’s speech, read Bryan Clark [[link removed]]’s latest op-ed in Defense One [[link removed]].)

Read here [[link removed]] . [[link removed]]

The Business of American Military Deterrence [[link removed]]

“The maniacal focus of my work over the last 20 years and hopefully the next 40 years is, How do we prevent World War III or win it?” Hudson Trustee Shyam Sankar [[link removed]] told The Wall Street Journal [[link removed]].

Read the full interview. [[link removed]]

The Role of Education in US-China AI Competition [[link removed]]

To win the AI competition, Washington needs to reform the American educational system to prioritize strategically important fields and reduce its growing reliance on Chinese talent, argued Mike Gallagher [[link removed]] on Fox News.

Watch here. [[link removed]]

More from Hudson Institute [[link removed]]

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