Look, we get it. Things are getting weird out there. One bright spot in all this uncertainty is the community we’re building here at Bulwark+. Each day members write to us with notes of gratitude for building a place for independent-minded patriots who value democracy, honesty and compassion—not to mention reporting and analysis based on truth and facts. So we think we have a better offer than Elon. Instead of paying for a meaningless blue checkmark, join Bulwark+ this November and get the next year of membership for just $8 per month. By now, it almost seems like piling on to write about Elon Musk’s spectacular self-defenestration. But really, why not? Seldom have we seen anyone despoil both his wallet and his reputation so completely and with such zeal. In a single week, the the World’s Richest Man, who launches rockets into space, electrifies cars, and was Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year”, exposed himself as… what’s the opposite of an idiot savant? A savant idiot? Shallow, petulant, erratic, endlessly needy, and basically absurd. “I am Iron Man” became “I am Zoolander.” How it began: How it’s going: Actually, this is the scene that captures our peculiar political and cultural moment: ** Consider what a week Elon had:
🚨Ben Collins, NBC News: “Twitter employees want to stress that the company is a nightmare right now and you cannot work there. And the website is built on sticks and it might fall apart. It’s a house of cards.” “Elon is deeply out of his depth.” “This could be really bad.”
** Musk’s goal in all of this is clear: after grossly overpaying for the company, and now faced with billions of dollars to cover debt service, Musk needs to turn a quick profit. Via the NYT: “He is under financial pressure to make the deal work, having taken on $13 billion in debt for the buyout. Yet the company has lost money for eight of the past 10 years and faces a decline in digital advertising amid a slowing economy.” But after just a few days, skepticism reigns. Dave Karpf sums it up nicely:
** But Musk’s financial goatf**k pales next to the reputational damage he has inflicted on himself. Just last year, Time Magazine wrote that he “dreams of Mars as he bestrides Earth, square-jawed and indomitable.” Even his absurdities made him seem larger than life to the fanzine that was once run by Henry Luce:
That was then. This year, stuff like this is being written about him (by Matt Labash)
And, no, they are not laughing with him, as he becomes the butt of inspired viral mockery: Via JVL’s Saturday newsletter: The hyper thin-skinned Musk responded by threatening to suspend the accounts of anyone who impersonated him (or anyone else, of course) * There’s so much going on here that reminds us how thoroughly we deserve all of this. Confusing entertainment with substance, we turned celebrities into senators, and reality tv stars into presidents; millions of Americans think that an over-leveraged performative asshole has somehow cracked the code of... well, pretty much everything. Our starf**king culture simply can’t get enough of starf**king someone who is not just famous, but rich beyond the dreams of avarice. And has 114 million followers on Twitter. In a long-vanished century, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote that the rich “are different from you and me,” but the new class of FU rich are something else altogether. They live in self-created bubbles of reinforcement that let them live lives of self-fondling solipsism. This is their precious. But marinating in the power, celebrity, and lulz long enough turns the oligarchs into Gollums, like the one who exposed himself so fabulously and relentlessly this week. Quick Hits1. Conspiracists Beware: Post-Election Lies Could Land You in Legal Hot WaterIn today’s Bulwark, Amanda Carpenter has a pre-election warning. 2. Josh Shapiro Makes His Closing ArgumentJim Swift is on the bus with the Democratic nominee in Pennsylvania. 3. Now Is Not the Time to Negotiate with PutinEric Edelman and David Kramer argue that pushing for negotiations could undermine the morale of the Ukrainians fighting in the field. Cheap ShotsYou’re a free subscriber to Morning Shots. For the full experience, become a paid subscriber. |