The Romulan Republic wrote:Good that he's getting backlash. As much as I might admire Musk's technological achievements, Trump is a loathsome and evil man who should be being treated as persona non grata, subject to constant obstruction and boycotts to prevent him from further dismantling democracy and rule of law in America, and threatening us with global conflict. Working with him only legitimizes, normalizes, and enables him.
I don't give Musk a pass on that just because he builds space ships.
Edit: As an aside, I'll add that while I know only the very broad strokes of Musk's political history, I have long felt that space advocacy was too closely aligned politically with the Right for my comfort.
This is mostly because the American
left has utterly, utterly failed to voluntarily involve itself with space advocacy
at all since the 1980s. Clinton and Obama both tended to 'kick the can down the road' on space projects, and tended to cut the budget for them, even if that resulted in severely compromised outcomes for the space program.
NASA doesn't get proper love from
either party, and private enterprise space travel organizations are so much a right-wing darling that they'll imprint on someone like Elon Musk and say "Ma-ma!" for reasons that are not Musk's fault.
If a normal Republican had taken office in the election of 2016, and wanted Elon Musk on his advisory council, I'd say "go for it." The problem is that Trump acts like an aspiring tyrant, and
opposing tyranny is a duty of all American citizens that comes ahead of many other things.
Including space.
Now, if Musk actually intends to try to negotiate with Trump in good faith and work to
actually moderate his administration, I suspect that he's in for a lot of disappointment. If I don't turn out to be wrong, I hope he acts on his disappointments and airs them accordingly, rather than committing the classic blunder of trying to hang on and 'moderate' a fundamentally broken regime.