The post Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin Calls Out Peter Thiel Over Anti-Cypherpunk Views appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has sparked debate after taking a swipe at billionaire investor Peter Thiel. In a post on X, Buterin wrote:
The comment wasn’t random. Buterin attached a passage from Thiel’s 2007 essay The Straussian Moment, drawing attention to the sharp contrast between Thiel’s philosophy and the values that built the crypto movement.
In the essay, Thiel leans on the ideas of political philosopher Leo Strauss, who believed secrecy and espionage were necessary to protect society.
That line alone explains Buterin’s frustration. Crypto was born from cypherpunk ideals that are privacy, decentralization, and protecting individuals from surveillance. Thiel’s vision points in the opposite direction.
Thiel’s Straussian leanings go back decades. At Stanford, he studied under Strauss-inspired thinkers and even co-founded The Stanford Review, a conservative student paper influenced by those ideas.
His skepticism of democracy is also well-documented. In 2009, he declared: “I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.”
On the business side, his track record fits that worldview. Palantir, the company he co-founded, is a backbone of U.S. government surveillance.
And in crypto, he’s no small player – Thiel holds a 9.1% stake in BitMine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) and 7.5% in ETHZilla, two of Ethereum’s largest treasury firms.
This is where the clash becomes obvious. Cypherpunks – the movement that inspired Bitcoin and later Ethereum – fought for tools that keep people safe from central control. Their philosophy was about openness and individual freedom.
Thiel’s Straussian approach promotes secrecy, elite-driven systems, and surveillance. Buterin’s post made one thing clear: Thiel may invest in Ethereum, but his values don’t align with the foundation crypto was built on.
After Buterin’s post, a community member raised concerns about powerful figures gaining influence in Ethereum. They suggested Ethereum should eventually “ossify” like Bitcoin, meaning the protocol would stop evolving to reduce risks of centralization.
However, he pushed back against narrowing Ethereum’s leadership, saying the solution is to widen and balance core research and development instead of closing ranks.
On one side lies the cypherpunk vision of decentralization and transparency. On the other, the risk of corporate and elite influence. Stay tuned for more if Thiel replies.


