The only difference between this guy and Elon Musk is $20.5 billion which is...uh...sorry I can't remember what-wow...billion. With a 'b'... |
I'm confused, are we talking castles and jousts, or just rampant ignorance and wealth inequity? Because we might be there... |
-Elon Musk, entrepreneur, industrialist,
harbinger of doom, or...well, not doom,
you don't know...but likely doom
I'm not saying it's a bad idea, I'm just suggesting that Isaac Asimov's estate should probably be taking to a lawyer. |
"Um, then we want to make sure there's enough of a seed of human civilization somewhere else to bring civilization back and perhaps shorten the length of the dark ages."
-Elon Musk, going full Seldon
Ok, so I can't argue with the wisdom of the Seldon plan, but does any one else have a problem with Elon Musk running the whole thing?
Personally, I see the extinction of country as one of the perks of a new dark age. |
It's not so much that I have a problem with Elon Musk personally, it's more rich people in general. Like, it's cool that he's using his vast, preposterous wealth to advance the cause of science, but I'm not sure I'm comfortable with the cause of science being up to any one person. Sure, he could build his own back up civilization on Mars, but it would be his civilization.What if say, he hated country music and didn't include it in the vault on his space colony. I mean, he'd be correct to hate country music, but should that really be his call?
Well, it's his space colony...you might point out. True, but only because he's crazy rich and he's only crazy rich because we, as a culture, let him be. As in, we haven't grabbed our pitchforks and torches and bashed in his front gate which we probably could have after he launched that roadster into space.
Pictured: a $200,000 car launched into space with a $90 million rocket. But even more impressive is the fact that in the back ground you can even see a planet where wealth disparity makes shit like this possible. |
"No seriously though, taxes are for poor people."
-Jeff Bezos
|
Speaking of pitchforks and torches, Musk isn't the only rich to buy his way loose of the surly bonds of Earth. Jeff Bezos, whose company Amazon apparently falls into a tax bracket so high they don't have to pay anything, is also planning to boldly go where no symbol of everything wrong with unfettered capitalism has gone before. He reaffirmed his company's plan to take some of the ridiculous cash reserves he made by strangling the life-blood out of America's retail economy and explore the endless reaches of outer space. And presumably once there, continue to not pay taxes.
How many Duckbergians were living in abject poverty while this asshole swam around in a seven story bin full of gold? |
So two things freak me out here: First, that it's possible in our civilization for someone to control this much wealth. Like, I don't care how smart or successful you are, nobody should be this rich. And second that our space program is so poorly funded that anyone with a few billion dollars can decide the fate of human kind and by extension, country music. Look, I don't want to tell these titans of industry-wait-is it industry when you just use money to make more money? Anyway, I don't want to tell them what to do with their embarrassing wealth but...wait, no, that's a lie, I do want to tell them what to do with their embarrassing wealth.
Sure, no one can deny the appeal of the frozen, radiation-soaked hellscape of Mars, but what if Elon Musk put some research money into a zero-emission car most of us could afford instead of shooting one that costs more than the average American home into space? Or if Jeff Bezos just paid his goddamn taxes? Admittedly these aren't sexy ideas, and no one's going to want me to talk at SXSW, but they might keep this planet livable a while longer.
"Yeah, but...Mars...is awesome."
-Some colonist, moments before being struck
by a $200,000 roadster falling from orbit
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