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Silicon Valley is full of wealthy men who think they’re victims, says Nick Clegg | Nick Clegg

Former politician and Facebook manager Nick Clegg said that the Silicon Valley is very rich and full of motto men who think they were arrogance and victim.

The former leader of the liberal democrats, three careers in Brussels, a MP, a deputy in Westminster and a deputy prime minister and a communication in San Francisco and a new book as a strategist of public policy.

In an interview with Guardian, Clegg praised Mark Zuckerberg, the founder and general manager of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, but the frightening of the culture encouraged in the technology capital of the world, which he said that the power and power was confused with “pity”.

“In the Silicon Valley, they think they were forced rather than thinking that they were lucky, [that] They are sacrificed. Machismo and self -pity I could not understand this deeply unattractive combination and I still haven’t understood.

He said: “Elon Musk is a cultural thing from the things that use saw to the podcast of any Silicon Valley. If you are accustomed to privileges, equality sounds like pressure.”

Clegg was eternal wondered about Mark Zuckerberg’s issues that he wasn’t perfect. Photo: Niall Carson/Pa

Former Deputy Prime Minister, Clegg’s Facebook founder is not excellent and in a thoughtful and endless way to wonder Zuckerberg’den personally did not speak, he added.

Clegg, Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos from Amazon and Tim Cook from Apple, including technology billionaires in Donald Trump began to engineering in the Silicon Valley before a change in the political attitude of the US in January returned to London.

How to save the new book on the Internet, moves behind the scenes in Meta, and gives an idea of ​​how the insushes of the Silicon Valley blind to the wrong steps. “Everyone wears the same clothes, uses the same cars, listens to the same podcasts, follows the same enthusiasm, Cleg said Clegg. “This is a place that arises from very large herd -like behaviors.”

However, Clegg, from three bubbles in his working life, found Westminster’s most inadequate because he lived only because of the past glory and his glorious.

Nick Clegg said he would agree with David Cameron in the referendum to leave the EU. Photo: Christopher Furlong/Getty

Clegg had very little to say about the coalition partner David Cameron between 2010-2015, but in 2016 he would not agree with him in the referendum to leave the EU. The vote took place a year later, which enabled Lib DEMS to be separated as a party leader and then took part in the Facebook group known as Meta in 2018.

Clegg was convinced that Britain would re -participate in the EU throughout his life, and if he saw that this debate continued, he would return to a political struggle in a heartbeat, although not in public office. Im I would drop everything – or I would leave barricades to people, ”he said.

Nick Clegg with his wife Miriam González Durántz, who is thinking of leading a new central party in Spain. Photo: David Cheskin/PA

Clegg says that he has no desire to go back to politics, while his wife Miriam González Durántz is thinking of leading a new centralist party in Native Spain. However, emptying the front of British politics does not mean that Clegg has left behind the events in Westminster.

“Good people, Ke Keir Starmer and Rachel said,” Good people, “but it is wildly cautious. “I wish they took larger oscillations. They are all infinitely half measures – a small reform here, a small step towards Europe, a small settlement towards Trump.

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