The MAGA-Tech Bro Divorce: How Billionaires Played the Base and Cashed Out
While MAGA regulars fought culture wars, the tech billionaires they elevated fought for tax cuts, deregulation, and cozy deals with China and Russia. The fallout is just beginning.
The MAGA Base Awakens
It’s finally happening. After years of mutual back-scratching, MAGA regulars are starting to realize that the tech bros—Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy, David Sacks, and their ilk—were never on their side. They weren’t in it to save the forgotten “real Americans” or restore the glory days of a mythical past. They were in it for power, deregulation, tax cuts, and keeping their businesses cozy with global powers like China and Russia. And now, the cracks in this unholy alliance are beginning to show.
Let’s not kid ourselves. Billionaire tech bros never had anything in common with Trump’s voter base. These are people who build private rocket ships, not backyard barbecues. They don’t vacation in middle America—they fly over it in private jets at 40,000 feet. The only time a tech bro thinks about a MAGA regular is when they need someone to like, retweet, or vote in a way that benefits their bottom line.
And yet, for years, this alliance held firm. Why? Because both sides were getting what they wanted—until they weren’t.
How MAGA Fueled the Tech Bro Agenda
Let’s go back to the beginning. The MAGA movement was built on rage—rage against elites, globalization, immigration, and the idea that America was losing its cultural and economic dominance. Enter the tech bros, who saw this rage not as a problem to solve but as a resource to exploit.
Take Elon Musk. The guy built his empire on government subsidies, international labor, and a global supply chain. But when it came time to solidify his political power, he started tweeting like a MAGA diehard. Free speech! Cancel culture! Fight the woke mind virus! The base ate it up. Musk’s acquisition of Twitter was seen as a heroic stand against liberal tyranny.
But here’s the thing: Musk didn’t buy Twitter to champion free speech. He bought it to control the narrative—and to silence critics when necessary. Case in point: MAGA accounts on Twitter are now discovering they’re being muted, shadow-banned, or demonetized for criticizing Musk’s pro-immigration, pro-China stances. Apparently, “free speech” has its limits when it interferes with business deals or personal interests.
Then there’s Vivek Ramaswamy, the ultimate political chameleon. One minute, he’s MAGA’s biggest cheerleader. The next, he’s defending globalism and arguing that the U.S. should stop supporting Ukraine because it’s bad for business with Russia and China. Make no mistake—Ramaswamy’s vision for America isn’t one of small-town values and hard work. It’s one of deregulation and economic exploitation, wrapped in a flag and sold to the highest bidder.
The Immigration Divide
One of the clearest fault lines in this alliance is immigration. MAGA regulars want a wall. The tech bros want open borders—at least for highly skilled workers who can code, engineer, or build their latest AI toy. Musk, for example, has openly supported H-1B visas because he knows Silicon Valley can’t function without them.
And here’s where it gets really interesting. MAGA’s anti-immigration stance isn’t just a cultural issue; it’s an economic one. They see immigration as a threat to their jobs, wages, and way of life. The tech bros, meanwhile, see immigration as essential to maintaining America’s global dominance in technology and innovation. They’re not wrong—but they’re also not interested in addressing the economic anxieties of Trump’s base. Why would they? It doesn’t serve their interests.
This tension is starting to boil over. MAGA influencers have been calling out Musk and others for their pro-immigration policies, only to find their complaints mysteriously disappearing from Twitter. The message is clear: the tech bros are in charge now, and dissent won’t be tolerated.
China, Russia, and the Global Grift
If immigration is a domestic issue dividing MAGA and the tech bros, foreign policy is the international equivalent. MAGA regulars love to talk tough on China and Russia. Tech billionaires, on the other hand, see these countries as critical business partners.
Elon Musk, for example, has been cozying up to China for years. Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory is a cornerstone of his electric vehicle empire, and Musk isn’t about to jeopardize that by taking a hard line against the Chinese government. Similarly, reports suggest Musk has been in regular contact with Vladimir Putin—a relationship that raises serious questions about his commitment to Western democratic values.
Vivek Ramaswamy is no different. His foreign policy positions are essentially a blueprint for appeasing authoritarian regimes, all in the name of avoiding conflict and keeping the global economy humming. It’s a stark contrast to the MAGA base, which thrives on the rhetoric of American exceptionalism and global dominance.
What Happens Next?
So, where does this leave us? For now, the MAGA movement is at a crossroads. They’re starting to see that the tech bros they once idolized were never their allies. But they’re also heavily invested in these figures. Musk owns Twitter, their primary platform for spreading their message. Vivek is a rising star in MAGA politics. And Trump himself is deeply indebted to the tech bro class for their financial and political support.
A full-blown divorce is unlikely in the near term, but the cracks are impossible to ignore. As these tensions grow, the MAGA base will have to decide: do they double down on their alliance with the billionaire class, or do they finally start looking for leaders who actually share their interests?
In the meantime, the tech bros will keep doing what they do best—profiting off division, exploiting rage, and building empires on the backs of the very people they claim to represent.
The Final Truth
The truth is, the tech bros never cared about MAGA regulars. They care about power, money, and maintaining their own dominance. And while the MAGA base was busy fighting culture wars, the tech billionaires were busy winning the only war that matters to them—the one for unchecked economic and political control.
It’s a tough pill to swallow, but MAGA regulars might finally be waking up to the reality: they weren’t just used. They were played.
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I’m mystified as to why Musk seems to be the major:only focus of ire by just about everyone. Do we think the other billionaires are more benign? Or is Musk an obvious and easy target because of his blatant political agenda? Don’t get me wrong, I think Musk is revolting but no more so than folks like Jeff Bezos.
…so looking forward to our country’s “duel dictatorship” it should work out just fine