You know, on one hand, I do want to like. I have been looking into some cool space stuff more recently, and it seems like spaceX and starlink have been doing pretty well, relative to musk's other business ventures, like X (no relation to spaceX, of course, which is great branding), and maybe tesla, which I kind of hate on the basis that they suck. But on the other hand, I wonder about how much of that is due to musk's involvement, or if it's just a factor of right place right time. I don't think venture capital capture and attention capture from the balding manlet CEO of tesla, channeled towards reusable rockets, I don't think any of that hurt, it was probably an advantage to those organizations, even if only like, by a small amount. But then, I dunno how much his mismanagement of these projects, and of most of his business ventures, have ended up hamstringing them in the long run, with unreasonable demands of his employees, and over-promising, and higher turnover rates than would probably be necessary. You know, I'm posting this from starlink internet, because I live in a rural place. Would that have happened without his idiocy? I'm inclined to say probably, but I'm also inclined to thank that guy that invented fertilizer, maybe even if he also invented mustard gas or whatever that story was. Which isn't really to say that musk invented anything, or what have you.
Basically what I'm saying, is that I think it is probably a good thing, if you have gotten to a point where you can look at someone who's "fucked up" history, and you can spin that into a good thing, even not by their intention, or even if it's removed a causal step or two, it's a good thing if you can spin their shit into gold. Probably. I dunno, it's reassuring to me somehow, among the sea of situations that are the exact opposite where some guy's cool idea gets taken by a soulless venture capital firm and drained like a vampire for investor hype before it's discarded as useless vaporware. Mistakes into miracles.