Palantir Technologies CEO Alex Karp in Davos, Switzerland in January 2026.Fabrice Coffrini/AFP—Getty ImagesThere’s little doubt that Americans are questioning the White House in the wake of its use of force at home and abroad.
Half of Americans say Trump’s immigration actions are too aggressive,
per a recent Politico poll, and just two in five Americans support the Trump administration's strikes on Iran,
according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
But what about the employees of the tech firms working with the federal government? Surely they’re more on board than the average American, right?
Wrong, according to a new
Wired report about Alex Karp-led Palantir. As the company touts its support of U.S. forces across the political spectrum, internal communications reportedly reveal a widening divide as Palantir—which sells data analytics tools—embraces an administration that has taken an aggressive stance on, well, everything.
“We need an understanding of our involvement here,” one employee reportedly wrote on Slack after federal immigration agents shot and killed Minneapolis nurse Alex Pretti.
“Were we involved, and are doing anything to stop a repeat if we were?” another employee reportedly asked in the wake of the Feb. 28 missile strike on an Iranian elementary school.
Palantir staffers told Wired that the secretive company—which has consistently welcomed criticism from within—has lately met feedback in internal channels with “philosophical soliloquies and redirection” as CEO Karp promotes his book calling for a reinstatement of the draft, among other things.
“We were supposed to be the ones who were preventing a lot of these abuses,” a former employee told the publication, adding: “We seem to be enabling them.”
—AN