How SpaceX turned the MyPillow of presidency contractors


It actually has been one thing to observe Elon Musk flip SpaceX into the MyPillow of rocket firms, hasn’t it?

Christ, I suppose I’ve to record off all of the miserable stuff from the previous few months: the Trump rally, the creepy assassination feedback, the even creepier feedback about impregnating Taylor Swift, spreading hurricane misinformation on X (and thus hindering reduction efforts), claiming his personal youngster was “killed” by the “woke thoughts virus,” that type of factor. I’ve seen lots of people recommend that is political radicalization, and positive, possibly it’s. However I can’t assist noticing a sick enterprise logic, too.

Musk has discovered he can leverage the tradition wars to his benefit

I’ve by no means accused Musk of being something apart from self-interested. As I see it, his solely actual politics are: Elon Musk ought to get to do no matter he needs, ceaselessly. And his newest political outbursts strike me as being clearly linked to his cash. He’s come to the identical conclusion as Donald Trump, which is that it’s significantly straightforward to grift Republican voters, and there are many rewards and only a few penalties for doing so. Donny, these males are nihilists. 

On the face of it, it would look silly for a businessman to alienate one of many main US political events. Musk has a protracted historical past of taking subsidies from native, state, and federal governments. His enterprise SpaceX is constructed primarily on company contracts within the closely regulated aerospace business. However I’m guessing Musk has discovered he can leverage the tradition wars to his benefit.

These of you aware of SpaceX might recall its litany of lawsuits in opposition to the federal government. For example, in 2005, the corporate alleged that Boeing and Lockheed Martin had engaged in anticompetitive conduct meant to maintain SpaceX from letting its Falcon 9 compete in authorities contracts. (The Falcon 9 didn’t have its first launch till 2010.)  

And in 2014, Musk sued the US Air Pressure over a $11 billion sole-source contract awarded to the United Launch Alliance. (The Falcon Heavy wouldn’t have its first launch till 2018.) SpaceX acquired concessions, dropping the swimsuit after the Air Pressure agreed to hurry up its efforts to certify SpaceX to launch navy satellites — and making extra launches accessible for SpaceX to compete on.

These fits acquired Musk what he needed

Now I personally, as a lady aware of the linear idea of time, discover these fits odd. How may SpaceX compete utilizing a rocket it hadn’t but launched? Positive, the “indefinite supply / indeterminate amount” contracts existed for the Falcon I, however that wasn’t what SpaceX was suing over. And but, these fits acquired Musk what he needed: extra doable authorities contracts. Actually, such fits have been as a lot a trademark of SpaceX as its rockets.

If you’re the type of one that makes use of lawsuits to get what you need, you could have made notice of the truth that Donald Trump appointed 200 federal judges, together with “almost as many highly effective federal appeals court docket judges in 4 years as Barack Obama appointed in eight,” as Pew Analysis places it. In 2021, greater than 1 / 4 of lively federal judges have been Trump appointees. Let’s not fake that’s insignificant; if it have been, the Federalist Society wouldn’t exist. If Musk helps Republicans, they’ll hold appointing judges who imagine issues that favor Musk — and he may even get fortunate and get some blatantly partisan judges, who’d assist him due to his affiliation.

Take into account Texas, which has taken an actual curiosity in Musk’s affairs. Throughout Musk’s Twitter acquisition, Texas Lawyer Normal Ken Paxton introduced an investigation of Twitter bot numbers — an investigation that neatly aligned with the argument Musk was making to attempt to get out of shopping for the social media firm. In fact, there’s additionally the Texas choose who owned Tesla inventory and greenlit a Musk-backed lawsuit in opposition to Media Issues for America. (The choose in query is understood for his politically conservative rulings.)

However wait! There’s extra. In 2020, SpaceX was awarded virtually $900 million in rural broadband subsidies from the FCC underneath Trump. However in 2022, the Biden-era FCC rescinded that funding since “the applicant had failed to fulfill its burden.” Two Republican FCC commissioners objected, and now a Republican Home Oversight Committee chair is probing the FCC’s choice.

Does this sound cynical? I suppose

Tradition conflict points are supposed to encourage a largely apathetic voter base that doesn’t particularly give a shit about authorities appropriations. They’ve been used traditionally by Republicans, beginning with Barry Goldwater, in an effort to enact particular monetary insurance policies which have largely damage lower-class People. It appears Musk has paid sufficient consideration to this specific historic quirk to determine the tradition conflict will help him, too.

Does this sound cynical? I suppose. Honest, coherent political opinions are largely the province of the bourgeoisie and nerds who paid consideration in authorities class. The Elon Musks of the world are thinking about energy. Not every thing Musk says is essentially calculated or politically helpful — his partisan allegiances have additionally prolonged to having pleasant conversations with mask-off white nationalists and reposting theories that girls are incapable of thought. Crucially, nonetheless, there aren’t any unfavorable penalties for these actions — solely extra consideration, which appears to be his private heroin.

Take into account the rocket state of affairs. For NASA, Musk is the one recreation on the town moreover Boeing, and he is aware of it. He additionally is aware of that even when he publicly misbehaves — smokes weed, for example — NASA will do nothing punitive. And I do blame the mind geniuses at NASA. As a substitute of getting in-house rockets for launching our spy satellites, we’re now depending on Boeing (lol, lmao), the United Launch Alliance (a three way partnership that features… Boeing), and SpaceX. (Positive, Jeff Bezos’ also-ran Blue Origin exists, I suppose, however come on.) By outsourcing its engineering, NASA put the nationwide safety equipment on the whims of contractors gone wild.

And Musk’s gamble seems to be that being a visual Republican will profit him greater than being impartial, presumably as a result of he assumes, in all probability appropriately, that Democrats received’t punish him for this. So in terms of, let’s say, SpaceX’s environmental injury, the security document of Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving,” and working situations for his staff, aligning with Republicans lets him recommend any examination of his conduct is politically motivated. Handy, isn’t it?

You may see the ambition even with the social media platform previously often known as Twitter. By courting the suitable, as he has unquestionably executed, he has tried to create a price proposition for an organization he has largely destroyed. The skew additionally provides him an excuse: if X dies, Musk can declare it wasn’t as a result of it was mismanaged however destroyed by the unconventional left or no matter. Because of his pleasant judges, he may even take these “radical left” critics to the cleaners in court docket!

Look, Musk’s look on the Trump rally launched a thousand assume items and the goofy picture that launched a thousand memes. However to speak about Musk’s political convictions, it’s a must to discuss the one factor he actually believes in: cash.

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