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Could a chill, normal dude do all this stuff?
Elon Musk
By Walter Isaacson | Simon & Schuster UK, 2023, 688 pages
Walter Isaacson could not have chosen a more fascinating subject than Elon Musk for the latest of his biographies, which include well known portraits of Steve Jobs, Leonardo da Vinci, Albert Einstein, Henry Kissinger and Benjamin Franklin.
And Musk is not out of place among this pantheon of history-altering men. The biography has been a number one New York Times non-fiction bestseller, a number two Sunday Times non-fiction bestseller, as well as the book of the year in various outlets.
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This account of Musk’s life gets to April 2023, in other words as far as his takeover and radical rehaul of Twitter in 2022, his development of AI for driverless cars, and the development of the most powerful rockets ever built.
Since the publication of this biography in September, Musk has been appointed by President-elect Trump to lead, alongside Vivek Ramaswamy, a planned Department of Government Efficiency to streamline US government expenditure; and now he is making headlines daily on this side of the Atlantic through his political tweets on X.
He has locked horns with the British political establishment over its handling of Pakistani grooming gangs (“Prison for Starmer”) and recently endorsed the AfD (Alternative for Germany) party as “the last spark of hope for Germany” in the upcoming February elections there and called the German Chancellor Olaf Scholz a “fool”.
A year ago, Musk also got involved in Ireland’s then proposed and now thankfully abandoned hate speech legislation, saying that he would fight against it. Predictably he increasingly becoming a hate figure of the left everywhere.
But even were Musk to do nothing more in the world of technology or now politics he has already earned his place alongside the world’s greats.
His life reads like something from a Marvel comic: through his space company SpaceX he has revolutionised space exploration, developing not only the biggest rockets ever built, but making them reusable. Through SpaceX’s subsidiary Starlink, he has changed the world of satellites. He owns Tesla, the world’s top electric vehicle seller, which may yet utterly change the way we use cars. In 2022 he famously bought Twitter – now X – for $44 billion, laid off nearly 80 percent of its workforce, and exposed and completely purged it of its radically woke bias. Musk also owns the tunnelling company “The Boring Company”, Neuralink which develops implantable brain–computer interfaces, as well as the AI research organization OpenAI.
He is the world’s richest person with a net worth currently estimated to be A$421 billion.
Walter Isaacson comes back repeatedly to key features of Elon Musk’s personality: his “almost freakish love of risk”, an incredible capacity for focused work, and his Asperger’s-tinged determination and harshness.
The question arises whether his ruthless driving (and firing) of employees is justified. As he himself said on Saturday Night Live in 2021: “To anyone I’ve offended, I just want to say, I reinvented electric cars and I’m sending people to Mars in a rocket ship. Did you think I was also going to be a chill, normal dude?”
He has a point. The same point is made by Bill Gates, as quoted in the book: “You can feel whatever you want about Elon’s behavior … but there is no one in our time who has done more to push the bounds of science and innovation than he has.”
Isaacson describes him as a visionary. His constantly restated ambition to send humans to Mars could be dismissed as the stuff of science fiction were it not for his track record: driverless electric cars, reusable giant rockets, household robots, etc.
He calls himself a “disrupter”– he enters into the world of finance, or motoring, or rockets (and now politics) – refusing to accept the established rules of the game, its regulations or perceived limitations, and is willing to aggressively challenge any rule, regulation or law as long as it is not a law of physics.
Isaacson makes passing reference to one of the concerns Musk has regarding technological progress in the West in general, and in the US in particular. He believes that technology – in particular technology related to space travel – has slowed down; there has been no progress in sending men to the moon since the early 1970s and, before its being retired, the Space Shuttle’s achievements were minor.
“Technology does not automatically progress,” Musk said. “This flight [history’s first private orbital mission] was a great example of how progress requires human agency.”
This echoes the belief of Musk’s friend Peter Thiel that innovation in the West in most fields – bar that of the digital world – has in fact stagnated over the last half century. For Thiel, Musk is bucking this trend through Tesla and SpaceX –“the most exciting example of a company showing determinate optimism today”.
It is telling that Thiel would use the word optimism. Musk does appear to rebel against the growing innovation-chilling pessimism of the West, embodied in excessive regulation and a lack of daring. Quizzed in an interview about the fact that his promises about self-driving cars had not yet materialised he replied: “Yeah, I’m sometimes a little too optimistic about time frames … But would I be doing this if I wasn’t optimistic?”
There is one area of Musk’s life where his sci-fi aura takes a \ dystopian turn: his views and actions regarding parenting.
Admirably he frets that populations around the world are falling and that people are not having enough children. He himself has had at least twelve children, but with three women, through IVF in at least five cases, and through surrogacy in the case of two other children. He appears to undervalue monogamy, as well as being undisturbed by IVF and surrogacy. Perhaps this is a legacy of his brutal childhood in South Africa, in particular the cruelty of his father.
Elon Musk is certainly a most fascinating and complicated man. Through his wealth, ownership of X, and readiness to intervene in politics internationally, he has become one of the world’s most influential men.
This biography is a splendid introduction to a man who will feature in headlines for years to come. I can’t wait for Volume 2.
Does Musk’s role in the Trump Administration worry you?
Rev. Gavan Jennings is a priest of the Opus Dei Prelature. He studied philosophy at University College Dublin, Ireland and the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, Rome and is currently the editor of Position Papers.
Image credits: portrait on the cover of "Elon Musk", by Walter Isaacson
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Susan Rohrbach commented 2025-01-13 00:42:08 +1100Peter, you could put Bill Gates in the same bucket as Musk. That they have great sway does not make them beyond moral reproach. And the frankentube new world they champion is certainly more ethically toxic for its voiding of free will.
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Peter Faehrmann commented 2025-01-12 21:24:19 +1100If you want to moralise to Elon Musk or explain him away, you’ve missed the point. Its like trying to moralise to Alexander The Great, and explain him away. Alexander changed history, and so is Elon.
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Maryse Usher commented 2025-01-12 11:55:03 +1100This man has far too much money and power by any reasonable standards and evidently not nearly enough family values to be an asset in a dramatic and drastic regime revolution. I’m watching this appointment with trepidation. Fearing Musk could be a big fly in the ointment. Mega prayer-campaign needed for him.
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mrscracker commented 2025-01-11 04:08:01 +1100Thank you Miss Susan. So sorry, I wasn’t responding to your comments. I was just rambling on.
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Susan Rohrbach commented 2025-01-11 02:39:08 +1100Mrs Cracker, when I suggested the vision of “Alexa” as grandmother, I was not envisioning an eccentric granny, I was envisioning a cold hard test tube with an anonymous egg in it.
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mrscracker commented 2025-01-11 02:31:41 +1100Extremely intelligent people can also be extremely eccentric. I think there’s a different wiring going on. You can have a deficit of certain skill sets with a great overabundance of others.
It’s just my own personal observations as a mother & granny & from working in a school, but it seemed the closer to an average intelligence, the more balanced overall a child might be. The higher the IQ, the more you might see quirks, lower social skills, etc.
I’m sure there’s more going on there but that’s just my undereducated 2 cents. -
Susan Rohrbach commented 2025-01-10 23:14:11 +1100Musk, himself a crony corporate, invested in President warp speed like the chicoms invested in Biden.
All that spacex decoration hype is intended to glamorize, or normalize, the frankentube. Just think back to your family tree and imagine each of your grandmothers to be named “Alexa”. Not very heartening. -
Michel Lhombreaud commented 2025-01-10 23:10:25 +1100I think the praise of human technology advancement is over-rated. It gives the appearance of progress while it really is often promoted by power-seeking people to control and destroy while ruining the environment. As we know, “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely” as well that the Bible tells us “do not put your trust in horses” (or in Egyptian or Assyrian princes). Humanity has now reached a crescendo and is on the verge of calamities worse than all the previous ones put together. But to return to this seemingly saviour of the free world, see how X and its AI can cut off free speech at the blink of an eye: https://rumble.com/v66kipg-censorship-on-x-my-investigation-placeholder-version.html
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Paul Bunyan commented 2025-01-10 11:35:14 +1100Anon Emouse – Musk is also a deadbeat dad. He uses nannies to do the hard work of raising his children, and only spends time with them for photo ops. He cares more about his own image than he does about his children.
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Anon Emouse commented 2025-01-09 22:26:50 +1100Two people to run the department of efficiency will never stop being utterly hilarious.
Further, being CEO of multiple companies and having time to be one half or a department head just tells me it must not be that hard to be a CEO. -