From Jake Paul and I hang out with Palmer Luckey, Anduril Founder · · Geoffrey Woo
“At the end of the day, you need approval from the State Department, the Pentagon, and the general political apparatus in order to sell to other countries. So, and then that's the way it should be. I think that you you have to have those decisions be in the hands of voters and the representatives that they elect. Otherwise, you effectively have corporations deciding on foreign policy, military policy.”
On , Palmer Luckey, Founder & CEO at Anduril, spoke about arms sales regulations during Jake Paul and I hang out with Palmer Luckey, Anduril Founder on Geoffrey Woo.
Palmer Luckey, founder and CEO of defense technology company Anduril, has been promoting a vision of American military power centered on mass-producible, autonomous weapons systems. In multiple public appearances, he argued that the United States should design weapons that can be manufactured by existing industrial facilities, such as car factories, rather than converting factories for military production. He described Anduril's Venom engine as having 90% fewer parts than competitors' engines and being assemblable with 10 simple hand tools. Luckey also discussed Anduril's autonomous fighter jet, calling it the first such U.S. system to be deployed with weapons. He stated that the company uses its own money to decide what products to build and then sells them to the government, describing Anduril as a "defense product company." Luckey has advocated for the United States to transition from being "the world police to being the world gun store," meaning equipping allied countries to defend themselves rather than fighting on their behalf. He expressed skepticism about the U.S. public's willingness to engage in another large-scale ground war, saying "we probably do not have in our national spirit right now the will to go and fight for someone else." On artificial intelligence, he said he is more worried about "dumb AI in the hands of evil people" than about hyper-intelligent hostile AI. Luckey also criticized the patent system, calling patents "Chinese instruction manuals," and argued for expanding the national security patent process. He described Anduril as a "nonpartisan but political company" that takes no side in American partisan issues but supports a stronger U.S. military relative to adversaries.