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Zoho's Sridhar Vembu slams elite universities: Says smart people rationalize 'meta-stupidity'. Social media erupts

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Can brilliance become a barrier to change? Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu believes so, and his recent commentary on X (formerly Twitter) has struck a nerve across social media and academia. Taking aim at elite educational institutions, Vembu used a provocative term—“meta-stupidity”—to describe how systems filled with intelligent individuals often end up reinforcing flawed frameworks instead of questioning them.

In his viral post, Vembu wrote, “Even a system full of smart people can be meta-stupid.” He argued that the brightest minds, rather than challenging broken systems, often rationalize them—creating a self-reinforcing loop that stifles critical thought. “The smart people end up supplying the endless rationalizations to keep the meta-stupidity from being challenged,” he added, suggesting that intelligence, when confined by conformity, can become its own prison.

Rationalizing Instead of Questioning
The term “meta-stupidity” quickly gained traction online. It resonated with many who have grown increasingly skeptical of the role of elite institutions in promoting genuine progress. One user expanded on Vembu’s point, describing meta-stupidity as the result of a “misaligned reward function + local optima trap,” where smart people optimize for metrics like prestige and consensus, rather than truth or innovation. “Higher intelligence paradoxically deepens the trap,” they noted, arguing that sophisticated rationalizations only help reinforce the system’s blind spots.

Another user pointed out that many intelligent individuals excel in logic-driven reasoning—but only within narrowly defined axioms. “The system doesn’t train people to question the axioms themselves,” they said, implying that foundational assumptions remain unchallenged in order to preserve institutional power structures.

From Elite Education to Echo Chambers
Vembu’s skepticism isn’t new. He has long questioned centralized models in both education and enterprise. But his latest critique comes at a time when the world is rethinking traditional benchmarks of success—whether elite degrees still hold weight, and whether prestige-driven consensus thinking actually benefits society.


His remarks reflect a larger cultural and intellectual shift. In an age of information saturation and institutional disillusionment, more people are asking whether today's most celebrated minds are truly equipped to lead transformative change—or if they’ve become complicit in maintaining a status quo that no longer serves evolving global needs.

As one netizen summarized, “We are so good at rationalizing our decisions rather than being rational. First we decide, then we invent justifications.”

An Uncomfortable Mirror for the Intellectually Elite
Vembu’s comments have tapped into a broader unease: that intelligence alone is no longer a guarantee of wisdom or progress. If the brightest are busy defending outdated systems rather than breaking them, it may take more than intellect to escape the trap of meta-stupidity. As critics and defenders weigh in, one thing is clear—Vembu’s challenge is more than a tweet. It’s a mirror held up to the world of elite knowledge, asking whether it still has the courage to question itself.

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