Forget Musk’s efforts to save the human race, transition the world from carbon fuels, his other projects. And forget the Gates Foundation’s attempts to end malaria. And Andrew Carnegie’s libraries. Forget philanthropic projects of the wealthy. Or whether those projects are driven by ego or love of mankind. Put all that aside.

Our ancestors lived in caves, infested by parasites, chased by predators, constantly on the edge of starvation. Today we have nice things like indoor toilets and medicine. Electric light, refrigerated food, airliners, the Internet. We didn’t steal that wealth from other cavemen or from space aliens. Wealth isn’t a zero-sum game.

People created those technologies, that wealth. Out of plants and animals, dirt and air, and their own cleverness and work. Who did that? All of us, yes, but a few made vastly larger contributions than others.

Our society is wealthy because of Boulton’s engines, Carnegie’s mills, Vanderbilt’s railroads, Edison’s lights, Gates’ software, and Musk’s cars and rockets. Most of us have always plowed our farms, woven our cloth, done our jobs. And mostly broken even – fed ourselves, raised our children, helped our neighbors survive…and created very little that was new.

But some people are better at creating wealth than others. Just as an Albert Einstein is rare, or a Tiger Woods, or a William Shakespeare is rare, there are a few rare people who are vastly – incredibly – better at creating wealth than most everyone else. Today we call them “billionaires”.

They may not be better than most of us at physics, or golf, or literature, or in any other way, but they have a rare talent for creating wealth. Billionaire’s money (when honestly earned; I exclude crony capitalists and kleptocrats) mostly reflects value created. Value that benefits us all.

Earning a billion dollars is really difficult. See how many try, and how few succeed.

And the living standard at $100 million is virtually identical to that of $100 billion. Most rational people retire when they have enough – long before billionaire status. We are very lucky that a few of these astoundingly productive and capable people keep working – keep chasing dreams, keep creating wealth – long after their personal material needs are satisfied. They made our world, and will make our future.

Sure, Musk makes us look bad. But only in the sense that Mahatma Gandhi does. Nobody should feel jealous of Shakespeare’s writing, Edison’s inventiveness, Einstein’s discoveries. Nor should we resent them for their talent and success. Au contraire; we should celebrate them.

[adapted from a comment on https://fakenous.substack.com/p/elon-musk-is-better-than-you]

3 Responses to “Yes, Elon Musk is better than you”

  1. Bob Says:

    I agree. It’s just a shame he’s not better at controlling his mouth. It’s cost him a lot of goodwill, and many billions of dollars.

  2. Dave Says:

    It’s hard to say if his mouth helps or hurts him in the long run.

    For sure it’s made him many enemies, but those were never true allies anyway. And his ability to run his mouth and, seemingly, get away with it is encouraging to his allies.

    Across the world dorm walls hold millions of posters of him smoking the blunt with Joe Rogan, saying “go fuck yourselves”, etc. I think “pedo guy” was over the top, but lots of people admire a little swagger in a hero – and a little human flaw (in that case, anger at being told to shove the sub up his ass). There’s value in being perceived as a rebel leader.

  3. Bob Says:

    “True allies” is a political concept. Musk is a businessman.

    There are no “true allies” in business; there are just people you can and like to work with.

    When car buyers or advertisers don’t want to deal with Musk because he’s said horrible things, there’s no upside to that.

    I hate to bring him up, but it’s like Trump. Trump’s policies are actually not that far from the mainstream of the (old) Republican Party, and the country did fairly well during his term. If Trump had just STFU, he would’ve won re-election easily.

    But he reveled in being an asshole. If Trump truly believes he’s good for the country, then he put his personal amusement above the good of the country. And it hurt both him and the country.

    That’s what Musk is doing. He’s risking his goals for the sake his own amusement. He’s gotten away with it so far because he’s the only game in town for EVs and spaceflight. But it’s not doing him any favors.

    (Notice that he’s not the only game in town in social media, and he hasn’t gotten away with it there.)

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