NEWS
The world’s wealthiest man has recently sold off his fortunes. He launches satellites into orbit and harnesses the sun. He rides the electric car he invented and rarely requires a driver. The stock market rises or falls with a flick of his finger. His every word is watched by a legion of adoring fans. He dreams of living on Mars.
As he drives down Texas Highway 4 between the Gulf of Mexico and the Rio Grande, Musk refuses to be recognized as the world’s richest man. Musk is prepared to launch the world’s largest rocket from one of the country’s southernmost points. Glistening spacecraft soar many levels above the desolate landscape.
His firm is buying up local real estate and urging staff to relocate. Musk stated earlier this year on Twitter that he was “creating the city of Starbase, Texas.” While his move to Mars is overachieving to most of us.
Musk has spent his life opposing the critics, and now he appears to be in a position to put them in their place successfully. He has a reason, “should humans experience failure on Earth, Musk sees ‘a futuristic Noah’s ark’ in space as a solution.” His SpaceX is the world’s leading commercial provider of rockets and crews. ‘Elon Unbound’ was the theme for the year 2021.
SpaceX was awarded NASA’s exclusive agreement to land American astronauts on the moon for the first time since 1972 April. Musk estimates a three-year schedule for this, with two more years to colonize mars. Making spacefaring rockets as reusable as airplanes is the key.
But has he always been this lucky to have everything he owns in his life without failures? Rather the opposite. When you consider how impossible Musk’s recent spaceflight achievement has been, it’s simpler to comprehend how he can believe something so absurd.
SpaceX almost financially bankrupted Musk before it became America’s passport to the solar system. The Falcon, the company’s first rocket, failed three times before reaching space in 2008.