Who wants to build a doomsday bunker? Nervous billionaires, says author | CBC Radio (2024)

The Current

In his new book Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires, tech journalist Douglas Rushkoff explores the billionaires building bunkers to survive a potential apocalypse — and the philosophy that inspires them.

‘They feel utterly helpless to avoid the inevitable event’: Douglas Rushkoff

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Mouhamad Rachini · CBC Radio

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Who wants to build a doomsday bunker? Nervous billionaires, says author | CBC Radio (2)

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The Current18:24New book explores the billionaires building bunkers and making post-apocalyptic plans

When American media writer and theorist Douglas Rushkoff was invited to give a talk at a desert resort in the American Southwest, he thought he was going to attend some sort of conference.

It turns out that it wasn't a conference at all.Rushkoff found himself in a private conversation withfive of the world's wealthiest men about the future of the planet— including two people he described as "documented billionaires."

"[At] first, I think it's just because they want to know where to invest their money," he said. "And then finally one of them [asks], 'Alaska or New Zealand?'"

"I'm like, oh man, they want to know where to put their doomsday bunkers," he toldThe Current's Matt Galloway.

Rushkoff initially questioned why they had turned to a self-described "anarcho-syndicalist media theorist" for advice on their doomsday bunkers.

Nonetheless,they spent an hour debating topics like how they can maintain control of their security force after their money becomes worthless in an apocalyptic scenario.

"I realized, you know, here are the wealthiest, most powerful people I've ever met," he said. "Yet they feel utterly helpless to avoid the inevitable event; you know, the climate crisis or pandemic or social unrest that leads to a revolution or mass unrest and renders the world unlivable for any of us."

They're willing to disrupt the cab industry, the hotel industry, the book industry. But they're not even thinking once about disrupting the underlying architecture of kind of extractive capitalism.- Douglas Rushkoff, media writer and theorist

Rushkoff believes the billionaires were "testing the underlying philosophy" of what he calls "the Mindset" — a Silicon Valley-style certainty that they can escape a catastrophe of their own making so long as they have enough money and the right technology.

"It's this idea that [might ask questions like]:Can we use technology to build a car that drives fast enough to escape from its own exhaust?" he said.

"If we can, then the only real question is how do we use technology to solve the problem of all these other people around, rather than anything else?"

He explores this mindset in his new book, Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires.

The dumbwaiter effect

Rushkoff said powerful people like the men he spoke to not only know they're the cause of the real world coming apart; they mean to escape it by doubling down on tech-focused solutions more interested in saving themselves, rather than the wider population.

In most cases, it's by building some piece of incredible technology — like a bunker or spaceship —that "hides them from the externalized problems of what they've done," he said.

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Who wants to build a doomsday bunker? Nervous billionaires, says author | CBC Radio (4)

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"A lot of times we think that we're developing a technology ...to make someone's life easier, but it's usually more about kind of hiding a painful life from us," he said.

One example of this is the dumbwaiter effect, named after the small freight lifts that were used to transport food and drinks throughout multi-floored buildings.

Rushkoff said powerful people like former U.S. President Thomas Jefferson used these devices, not to make their lives easier, but to sweep the exploitation of enslaved people under the rug.

"The dumbwaiter was not developed to save the enslaved people labour. It was invented to hide the enslaved people's labour from the guests, so that you could sit there with your dinner guests in the upstairs dining room, blissfully unaware of what was going on over there."

WATCH: Amazon workers slam workhouse conditions

Who wants to build a doomsday bunker? Nervous billionaires, says author | CBC Radio (5)

Amazon workers slam warehouse conditions

4 years ago

Duration 3:49

Workers for online retail giant Amazon say the company is not protecting staff from the spread of the coronavirus. Five cases of COVID-19 have been reported at the company's facility north of Calgary.

Rushkoff said the mindset also exists in the average population, not just among Silicon Valley elites.

He remembers his father, who grew up in a poor neighbourhood in difficult conditions.He would say things like:"I worked hard, I got a job so I could get out of that neighbourhood and raise you in a better one."

But Rushkoff said that mentality won't always work, especially in an apocalyptic scenario.

"You can't adopt that idea of let's just get out to a better neighbourhood and leave those ones behind," he said. "You've got to finally turn around and say, no, we've got to make the whole neighbourhood better for everyone."

He said this mindset has especially trickled down in the pandemic.

"Ifyou're wealthy enough … you could stay in your home and order things on Amazon and have workers deliver it [and]externalize the risk to all these other people," he said.

Ends justifythe meansno more

According to Rushkoff,the billionaires of today areinpositions of power unlike anything seen before — and they've adopted "the most kind of rapacious form of venture capitalism as their religion."

"They're willing to disrupt the cab industry, the hotel industry, the book industry ... but they're not even thinking once about disrupting the underlying architecture of kind of extractive capitalism," he said.

  • Instead of writing big cheques to fight climate change, billionaires should just pay taxes: environmentalist

Nonethless, Rushkoff believes most people are operating outside of the mindset, and realize how futile outrunning an apocalyptic scenario using wealth alone is.

"I think we're becoming a bit less 'ends justify's the means' about things," he said.

"I think we're coming to realize that if … you're not doing it in the moment, if you're not actually treating other people and your family and your community in a way that makes sense for everybody, it's going to catch up with you."

Produced by Julie Crysler.

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Who wants to build a doomsday bunker? Nervous billionaires, says author | CBC Radio (2024)

FAQs

Who is building Doomsday bunkers? ›

Doomsday bunkers are all the rage among the rich and famous. Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly developing a 5,000-square-foot underground bunker complete with a living space, a mechanical room, and an escape hatch at his $100 million Hawaii compound.

Is it true that billionaires are building bunkers? ›

Hawaii isn't the only place that has billionaire-owned secret underground shelters. Hamilton, Hanmer Springs, and Wanaka in New Zealand are also among some of the popular bunker hotspots of the ultra-rich.

Why are rich people creating bunkers? ›

Billionaires' Survivalist Bunkers Go Absolutely Bonkers With Fiery Moats and Water Cannons. Amid 'World War III' fears, apocalypse-fearing moguls are investing millions in survival strategies including rotating fireplaces out of 'Indiana Jones' and heightened tactical systems.

Why are elites building bunkers in America? ›

It was a place where someone could store precious belongings away from "warring factions and social unrest, but also the environment," said Bradley Garrett, a cultural geographer based in California and the author of Bunker: Building for the End Times.

Who are the famous billionaire bunker owners? ›

Synopsis. Florida's Indian Creek Village is also known as 'Billionaire Bunker'. It has long been known for its incredibly deep-pocketed residents. They include Jeff Bezos, Ivanka Trump, hedge fund king Ken Griffin, Tom Brady, Carl Icahn, Eddie Lampert and singer David Guetta.

Which billionaires build underground bunkers? ›

Oracle founder Larry Ellison purchased 'almost all' of the Hawaiian island Lanai. Yes, their vast estates do include bunkers and other technologies traditionally associated with prepping. For example, the mansions of Ko'olau Ranch are connected through underground tunnels that feed into a large shelter.

Who is the richest person in the world? ›

Forbes Richest List 2024: Bernard Arnault retains title as World's richest person with $233 bn fortune; Report records 2781 billionaires worldwide.

Where does the most billionaires live? ›

New York City

Are billionaires selling off stock? ›

"Billionaire CEOs like [Jeff] Bezos, [Mark] Zuckerberg, Jamie Dimon, and the Walton family are selling off massive amounts of their own stocks, and analysts think the CEOS may be bracing for an economic downturn," he said, adding, “An overheated stock market continues to climb to new heights as investors feed that ...

Where is the largest Doomsday bunker? ›

Massive Completely Off-grid Former Military Complex

Vivos xPoint is located near the Black Hills area of South Dakota, just south of the City of Edgemont.

Are richer people happier? ›

“In the simplest terms, this suggests that for most people larger incomes are associated with greater happiness,” says Killingsworth, a senior fellow at Penn's Wharton School and lead paper author. “The exception is people who are financially well-off but unhappy.

Where is the biggest bunker in the United States? ›

The former army base, which stretches across 18 miles, is located deep in the Black Hills mountain range in South Dakota. Having previously been used to store bombs and munitions from 1942 to 1967, it has since been transformed into a community of 575 livable bunkers, which can house up to 10,000 people.

Do millionaires have bunkers? ›

Some of the world's wealthiest people have more than fame and fortune in common—some also have luxury underground bunkers.

Who is building an underground bunker? ›

Mark Zuckerberg's underground bunker is just a small part of his sprawling Hawaii compound. Zuckerberg is spending close to $300 million to build his dream home and make sure his family (and at least 30 of his closest friends) can survive the worst disasters earth can throw at him.

Who built fallout shelters? ›

Initially, owners of public buildings were urged by the federal government to create fallout shelters in their facilities. But as increasing numbers of above-ground nuclear weapons tests were conducted by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union, people began building fallout shelters of their own.

What is the largest Doomsday bunker in the world? ›

Vivos xPoint is located near the Black Hills area of South Dakota, just south of the City of Edgemont.

How long can you survive in a doomsday bunker? ›

Underground fall-out shelters can be designed to maintain acceptable thermal conditions for isolation periods of about 2 weeks, with minimal artificial heating or cooling and ventilation. Mechanical cooling is essential in desert regions and hot-humid areas.

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