How to Rule the World
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A searing critique of the crony-capitalist, talent-scraping culture
of the Stanford elites, by a brilliant young journalistWhen
seventeen-year old Theo Baker arrived at Stanford University one
brisk September morning, its manicured lawns, palm trees and
sparkling fountains, all under azure Californian skies, provoked in
him both wonderment and a sense of anticipation. After all, this
legendary campus, where Rodin sculptures rub shoulders with nuclear
laboratories, is where Silicon Valley was birthed. Its research
park housed the headquarters of Facebook and Hewlett Packard, with
venture capitalists a stone's throw away, ready to fund the next
promising teenager's startup.With an annual budget eclipsing the
budgets of 153 countries, yet a reputation for being laid-back and
innovative, Stanford seemed like tech heaven. Instead, Baker
discovered a cultural rot. In this astonishing debut Baker recounts
his freshman year mission to uncover the secrets behind Silicon
Valley's training ground.He describes the Stanford inside Stanford,
a strange, money-soaked subculture of infinite excess and access,
afforded only to those special few students plucked from the crowd
and expected to create billion dollar companies. And he documents a
culture of getting ahead at any cost, of cut corners enabled and
embraced. A culture that went to the very top.Baker's
investigations for the student newspaper would soon place him in
the impossibly difficult position of investigating his own
university's president, a famous neuroscientist with a
squeaky-clean reputation. By the end of his freshman year, after
Baker's reporting revealed two decades of unreported research
misconduct allegations, including in a study that claimed to have
found the cause of degeneration in Alzheimer's patients, Stanford's
president was forced to resign. Both coming-of-age story and
clear-eyed exposé, Baker takes us inside this elite American world
like no other, revealing the ambitious, amoral, and at-times
laughably absurd truth behind the institution training kids to rule
the world.