
And he’s a Nazi!
Okay, he might take issue with that particular word. But between the fascism, white supremacy, and eugenics… y’know, if it quacks like a duck and all that.
There’s a coworker I have who was fond of saying tech
…I know, I know; you didn’t expect me to throw math at you today, but you do realize when we talk economics, math inevitably gets involved. Part of the reason I dropped my economics minor was because of how much math gets involved; I was already struggling with algebra, and they expected me to learn calculus. My biblical languages minor was way easier. But I digress.
Anyway I was trying to explain stocks aren’t “just paper.” Both of us own stock in our company, and that’s not “just paper”—we can sell it whenever we like, and get precisely what that stock is trading for. In cash. As if we took money out of a checking account.
“Yeah but Musk can’t do that,” he said. Of course he can. He just won’t.
’Cause the instant you sell your stock—assuming it went up in value not down—you owe taxes on it. And if Musk sells all his Tesla stock, 507.5 available shares on the market are gonna make Tesla’s price drop, probably by a lot; and a lot of investors are gonna sell other stocks to gobble up all those cheaper Tesla stocks, making other stock prices drop, making the whole market drop, including Musk’s other stock holdings. He’s gonna lose money if he totally cashes in.
That’s why he doesn’t. He gets a paycheck from his companies, and lives on that. If he needs a billion dollars, like he did when he bought Twitter, banks will let him borrow money against his stock, with ridiculously low interest rates, and he can easily live like he has billions in cash. And if he ever needs actual cash, he can quietly cash in smaller amounts of his stock; just enough to not throw the market into a panic.
Then again, Musk loves to troll people for the evil fun of it all. So if he wanted to give the market a seizure, just ’cause, he could. He’d lose money, but he’d still be a billionaire.
Well, trillionaire now.
One of Musk’s other companies is SpaceX. You’ve heard of their space rockets for
Could he cash them? Again, of course he can. Creating a bigger seizure in the market than if he merely sold his Tesla stock, and it’d terrify his bankers, but yeah—he’d have $1.064 trillion in the bank. Till the
Is SpaceX worth its $2.11 trillion market capitalization? (That’s economics-speak for its total value in stock market shares.) Bluntly, yes it is. Because a company is literally worth what traders are willing to pay for its shares. Traders are willing to pay $165 a share; therefore all the shares are worth $2.11 trillion. Basic multiplication.
Should it be worth $2.11 trillion? Absolutely not. SpaceX has never turned a profit. It’s massively in debt—that is, it was massively in debt, but thanks to the stock market they have tons of money now. Its businesses are unethical: The rocket launches apathetically do untold harm to the environment, and I’m not just talking about the rockets which blow up, or the Starlink low-earth satellites which fall into the atmosphere and burn up every day. (Seriously, every day.) Twitter, which has few to no guardrails, enables hate speech, disinformation, and trafficking. Grok, which likewise has few to no guardrails, does the same. The data centers consume electricity and water, often to the detriment of the communities they’re in. And Musk, who oversees them all, doesn’t care about anything but what affects him personally. Critique him on Twitter and y’might get banned. Say any other violent, provocative thing on Twitter and he’ll shrug and say them’s the risks of free speech.
But capitalism doesn’t care whether you’re ethical. It cares that you make them money. SpaceX itself won’t make you money… but frenzied traders, who imagine SpaceX shares are hot commodities, will make money on those shares when they trade ’em just right. It doesn’t matter what the company does, or if it’s any good, or if Musk is running it properly. It’s whether you can profit off its existence. And you can.
And Musk gets the bragging rights of saying he’s the world’s first trillionaire. Well, in American dollars. If you’re going off Indian rupees, which are 95 to the dollar, he was a trillionaire already. So are a few other billionaires. Mark Zuckerberg’s $220 billion equals ₹20.9 trillion.
There are some socialists who insist there shouldn’t be such a thing as a trillionaire. Or a billionaire. Their joke is instead of having a billion dollars, you get to keep your $999.9 million, you get a trophy which says you won capitalism, and the rest should go to taxes, to pay for lots and lots of necessary infrastructure and social programs. Or charity, but most socialists say taxes.
I don’t care if there are billionaires or trillionaires, but I do want them to pay their fair share of taxes, and currently none of them do. There are tax loopholes which only the very wealthy can access, and these guys use ’em to pay nothing. Sometimes less than nothing; sometimes the government actually gives them money. Sounds absolutely wrong, but if you’re a social Darwinist you’ll believe this is only right; why shouldn’t you be rewarded for being clever enough to outwit the government?
The national debt and deficit would be substantially lower if we taxed the rich. Our infrastructure problems would be gone if we taxed the rich. Our schools would be funded; our teachers would be paid; public colleges would be free again. We could also afford to fund public healthcare. Homeless people could be helped, and housed. The hungry won’t go hungry. The desperately poor won’t turn to crime, and fill our prisons.
But that’s not gonna happen so long that billionaires can buy votes, and keep politicians from ever passing laws to close those loopholes.
Elon Musk won’t be the last trillionaire, but he oughta be the last trillionaire to live tax-free.
