Coffee and cocaine had a lot in common for the Bay Area tech milieu: Both came from the Americas as part of the restructuring of Third World economies toward consumable exports; both were increasingly available at several price points; and both made people go fast for long periods of time. Following Miami, Los Angeles, and New York, Silicon Valley was the fourth corner of the American coke binge. Thanks in part to the industry’s cozy relationship with elements in the U.S. federal government, the international cocaine trade increased in volume during the period. In the 1980s, street and wholesale prices fell rapidly while purity increased.30 Blow became as central to the tech industry as it was to Hollywood or Wall Street, and Palo Alto gave the drug its own nerdy spin. “The valley’s would-be titans of industry preferred their cocaine at the office, or at house parties where husbands gathered together to talk incessantly about computers, while ignoring their wives,” writes scholar Charlton D. McIlwain. “Cocaine retained every bit of its glitz and glamour. But in the valley, it was all designed to push the work. Cocaine labored in service of the dream. For most, the dream was a fantasy, but they chased it nonetheless. Cocaine kept them in the race.”31 Michael Malone describes the era as a white-powder blizzard—the only kind the Bay ever saw—complete with coke mirrors made of clean silicon wafers purloined from work.32 The drugs certainly help explain both the wacky business models and the general surfeit of enthusiasm—as well as the country’s highest divorce rate.33
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