SpaceX will try to launch its Starship rocket again on Thursday – NPR

Visitors look on as SpaceX's Starship, the world's biggest and most powerful rocket, stands ready for a scheduled launch from Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas, Wednesday, April 19, 2023. Eric Gay/AP hide caption

Visitors look on as SpaceX's Starship, the world's biggest and most powerful rocket, stands ready for a scheduled launch from Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas, Wednesday, April 19, 2023.

SpaceX will try to launch its Starship again on Thursday after it was delayed earlier this week due to a frozen valve.

The launch window will begin at 9:28 a.m. ET in Texas and last for 62 minutes, the company said.

"All systems currently green for launch," SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said.

Musk has billed the world's largest rocket as a way to transport humans to the Moon and Mars.

"With a test such as this, success is measured by how much we can learn, which will inform and improve the probability of success in the future as SpaceX rapidly advances development of Starship," SpaceX said in a statement.

Numerous SpaceX rockets have blown up during testing in the past.

The live stream of the launch will be available about 45 minutes before the anticipated takeoff.

Here is the original post:

SpaceX will try to launch its Starship rocket again on Thursday - NPR

SpaceX fires up powerful Falcon Heavy rocket ahead of April 18 … – Space.com

SpaceX's powerful Falcon Heavy rocket is getting ready to fly again.

Elon Musk's company conducted a "static fire" (opens in new tab) with the Falcon Heavy on Thursday (April 13), briefly igniting the vehicle's 27 first-stage Merlin engines on the launch pad at NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida.

Static fires are common preflight tests, designed to ensure that a rocket's various systems are primed for launch. And that liftoff is just around the corner for the Falcon Heavy: It's scheduled to fly from KSC on Tuesday (April 18) at 7:29 p.m. EDT (2329 GMT).

You can watch the liftoff live here at Space.com, courtesy of SpaceX, when the time comes.

Related: SpaceX's 1st Falcon Heavy rocket launched Elon Musk's Tesla into space 5 years ago

The upcoming launch will send two satellites toward geostationary orbit. The primary payload is the 14,000-pound (6,400 kilograms) ViaSat-3 Americas, a broadband satellite that will be operated by California-based company Viasat.

The secondary satellite flying on Tuesday is Arcturus, a communications craft belonging to San Francisco-based Astranis Space Technologies.

"Although it only weighs 300 kg [660 pounds], the mighty communications satellite has the ability to provide data throughput up to 7.5 Gbps for ... Alaska and the surrounding region," EverydayAstronaut.com wrote (opens in new tab) of Arcturus in a description of the Falcon Heavy mission.

The Tuesday launch will be the sixth overall for Falcon Heavy, which debuted in February 2018 with a test flight that sent Musk's red Tesla Roadster into orbit around the sun with a spacesuit-clad mannequin at the wheel.

The Falcon Heavy's most recent flight, a classified mission for the U.S. Space Force called USSF-67, occurred in January of this year.

The Falcon Heavy consists of three strapped-together first stages of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, with the central booster topped by an upper stage and the payload(s). These three first-stage boosters are designed to be reusable, but none of them will be recovered on Tuesday, according to EverydayAstronaut.com. (There apparently won't be enough fuel left over for the boosters to steer themselves back to Earth for safe touchdowns.)

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There (opens in new tab)" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter@michaeldwall (opens in new tab).Follow us on Twitter@Spacedotcom (opens in new tab)orFacebook (opens in new tab).

Read the original here:

SpaceX fires up powerful Falcon Heavy rocket ahead of April 18 ... - Space.com

SpaceX Dragon cargo ship departs space station and returns to Earth – Space.com

A robotic SpaceX Dragon cargo capsule is returning to Earth today (April 15) after a month parked at the International Space Station.

The Dragon CRS-27 supply ship undocked from the International Space Station at 11:05 a.m. EDT (1505 GMT) as both spacecraft orbited high over the Indian Ocean, beginning an hours-long trip back to its home planet. It splashed down off the Florida coast at about 4:58 p.m. EDT (2058 GMT), SpaceX wrote in a Twitter update (opens in new tab).

"After re-entering Earths atmosphere, the spacecraft will make a parachute-assisted splashdown off the coast of Florida on Saturday, April 15," NASA wrote in blog post (opens in new tab). NASA will not livestream the Dragon capsule's splashdown.

Related: Facts about SpaceX's Dragon capsule

The Dragon launched into orbit from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on March 14, kicking off SpaceX's 27th robotic cargo run to the orbiting lab for NASA.

The Dragon carried up about 6,300 pounds (2,860 kilograms) of supplies on its mission, which is known as CRS-27. (CRS stands for "commercial resupply services.") The cargo included a variety of hardware, 60 different scientific experiments and some gustatory treats for the station astronauts.

"The crews requested some fresh fruit and refrigerated cheeses," Phil Dempsey, NASA's International Space Station Program transportation integration manager, said during a CRS-27 prelaunch press conference on March 13. "So on board are apples, blueberries, grapefruit, oranges [and] cherry tomatoes, as well as a few different cheeses."

The CRS-27 Dragon will carry about 4,300 pounds (1,950 kg) of "experiment hardware and research samples" down to Earth with it today, according to the NASA blog post.

This is a unique capability of the SpaceX capsule. The other two robotic cargo craft that currently service the space station Russia's Progress vehicle and Northop Grumman's Cygnus are designed to burn up in Earth's atmosphere when their time in orbit is up.

Editor's note: This story was updated at 1:45 pm ET to reflect the successful undocking of the Dragon CRS-27 spacecraft.

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There (opens in new tab)" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter@michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or on Facebook (opens in new tab).

More:

SpaceX Dragon cargo ship departs space station and returns to Earth - Space.com

SpaceX launches 51 small satellites, lands rocket back on Earth – Space.com

SpaceX launched dozens of small satellites to orbit early Saturday morning (April 15) and landed the returning rocket back on Earth.

A Falcon 9 rocket topped with 51 satellites lifted off from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base at 2:48 a.m. EDT Saturday (0648 GMT; 11:48 p.m. on April 14 California time), kicking off the Transporter-7 rideshare mission.

The Falcon 9's first stage come back to Earth as planned, acing a vertical touchdown at Vandenberg about 7 minutes and 45 seconds after launch. It was the 10th launch and landing for this particular booster, according to a SpaceX mission description (opens in new tab).

Related:8 ways that SpaceX has transformed spaceflight

The rocket's upper stage, meanwhile, continued carrying the 51 satellites to orbit. The payloads were deployed on schedule over a roughly 95-minute span, beginning about an hour after liftoff, SpaceX confirmed via Twitter (opens in new tab).

The payloads that launched Saturday are a diverse lot, consisting of "cubesats, microsats, hosted payloads and orbital transfer vehicles carrying spacecraft to be deployed at a later time," SpaceX wrote in the mission description.

The spacecraft will be operated by a variety of customers. The main payload, for example, is the Imece Earth-observation satellite, which was provided by the Turkish government.

Another three belong to Canadian company GHGSat, which detects greenhouse gas emissions from space. And another satellite, called Brokkr-1, will be operated by AstroForge, a California-based startup that aims to mine asteroids.

"During this mission, we will demonstrate our refinery capabilities with the goal of validating our technology and performing extractions in zero gravity," AstroForge wrote in a January blog post (opens in new tab). "The spacecraft will launch pre-loaded with an asteroid-like material that the refinery payload will vaporize and sort into its elemental components."

As its name suggests, Transporter-7 is the seventh small-satellite rideshare mission that SpaceX has launched to date. The most recent one, Transporter-6, launched atop a Falcon 9 on Jan. 3.

Transporter-6 sent 114 satellites to orbit quite a haul, but not a record. The mark belongs to SpaceX's Transporter-1, which launched a whopping 143 spacecraft back in January 2021.

Saturday's launch was the 24th of 2023 so far for SpaceX. Falcon 9s have flown all but one of these; the lone outlier was USSF-67, a classified mission for the U.S. Space Force launched by SpaceX's powerful Falcon Heavy rocket on Jan. 15.

We should see a lot more spaceflight action from the company in the coming weeks and months. SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said last summer that the company could launch up to 100 orbital missions in 2023.

And SpaceX is currently gearing up for the first-ever orbital test flight of Starship, its next-generation spaceflight system. That landmark mission is scheduled to fly on Monday (April 17).

Transporter-7 had been scheduled to launch early Wednesday morning (April 12), but SpaceX announced on Tuesday (April 11) that it was pushing the try back by two days to allow more time for pre-launch checks and to give the weather a chance to improve. The company tried to launch early Friday morning (April 14) but scrubbed the attempt due to bad weather with about 30 seconds left on the countdown clock.

Editor's note: This story was updated at 10:35 a.m. EDT on April 12 with the correct launch date of April 14 (not April 13). It was updated again at 2:50 a.m. EDT on April 14 with news of the scrubbed launch attempt and new target date of April 15. It was updated again with news of successful launch and rocket landing at 3:10 a.m. EDT on April 15, then again at 11:10 a.m. EDT on April 15 with news of payload deployment.

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There (opens in new tab)" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter@michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab), or on Facebook (opens in new tab) and Instagram (opens in new tab).

Excerpt from:

SpaceX launches 51 small satellites, lands rocket back on Earth - Space.com

It Turns Out SpaceX and Tesla Get Way More Government Money … – Futurism

His decision to slap a "government-funded media" label on NPR's Twitter account makes no sense.The Taxman Cometh

It looks like Elon Musk needs to put his or the taxpayer's money where his mouth is when it comes to "government-funded" enterprises.

The Twitter owner's controversial decision to slap a "government-funded media" label on NPR's account led to the independent public broadcaster's exitfrom the social network.

Many saw the move as hypocritical, Gizmodo reports, since several of Musk's ventures, including SpaceX and Tesla rely far more on government funding.

While NPRdoes receive public grants, they only account for one percent of its revenue, the nonprofit news service claims. Those grants were only one percent of the organization's $309 million revenue last year, though that percentage doesn't include the government grants some of NPR's local affiliates use to pay their licensing fees.

Compared to the amount of money Musk's ventures have received from the government over the years, that's chump change.

SpaceX alonegot a whopping $2.8 billion in government contracts last year, according toThe Information, and has gotten a total of $15.3 billion from the government since 2003.

While Gizmodo notes that Musk insists contract awards are not the same as the sort of subsidies that NPR gets,the news site is arguing that were it not for NASA taking a chance on SpaceX, the company would not exist today.

Along with the money SpaceX has been awarded by the US government, the company requested an $885 million subsidy about 295 times more than what NPR got last year for its Starlink satellite broadband service to serve rural communities, but was denied by the Federal Communications Commission. The company has since appealed that decision.

Speaking of subsidies: Tesla has also gotten its own giant share of taxpayer money via grants meant to boost electric vehicle manufacturing, as well as a $465 million preferential loan from the US Department of Energy back in 2010 that Musk, to his credit, did pay off by 2013.

Like countless other companies, Tesla also accepted some untold amount of cash through the Treasury Department's corporate aid during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in July 2020 and as Insider reported at the time, Musk received them right after tweeting against subsidies.

In short: Tesla and SpaceX are far more "government-funded" thanNPR, but you won't see Musk labeling their Twitter accounts as such.

More on Elon: Twitter Rips Into Elon Musk's New Crypto "Ponzi Scheme"

Go here to read the rest:

It Turns Out SpaceX and Tesla Get Way More Government Money ... - Futurism

4/20: Elon Musk’s Deadline To Remove Legacy Blue Ticks Today. What’s Next – NDTV

Elon Musk announced the date to press users to sign up for Twitter Blue.

Microblogging platform Twitter will remove the legacy blue tick from verified accounts from today (April 20). This comes weeks after company's CEO Elon Musk announced the date to press users to sign up for Twitter Blue, its paid for subscription service. Once this happens, Twitter will have verification marks only for paid users and businesses, and government entities and officials. The legacy 'blue ticks' were considered coveted as they were only given to notable social media users like celebrities, politicians and journalists who had passed strict verification processes online. The process allowed Twitter's team to verify a user's identity and prevent impersonators - something that many people have claimed will be diluted under the new service.

In his April 12 tweet, Mr Musk had said, "Final date for removing legacy Blue checks is 4/20."

"To keep your blue checkmark on Twitter, individuals can sign up for Twitter Blue," the microblogging platform added.

Twitter Blue is a premium subscription service for users that adds a blue checkmark next to users' profile name and also gives them early access to new features introduced by the microblogging platform. These include edit tweet, which allows users to edit their Twitter posts within 30 minutes, custom app icons, NFT profile pictures, and bookmark folders.

The service is available for web, iOS and Android devices. As per the microblogging website, the monthly subscription fee for iOS and Android users in India is Rs 900 while the fee has been kept lower at Rs 650 per month for the web. Twitter Blue users will also be able to send longer tweets - up to 4,000 characters and upload files with a file size up to 2 GB and a maximum duration of 60 minutes by paying the subscription fees.

Elon Musk-owned social media platform had previously stated that it would start removing the blue checkmark badges from legacy verified accounts on April 1. On April 2, Twitter changed the language in the description of verified users to read, "This account is verified because it's subscribed to Twitter Blue or is a legacy verified account." This meant users will not be able to tell who is paying for a blue checkmark and who isn't.

Waiting for response to load...

Read the original post:

4/20: Elon Musk's Deadline To Remove Legacy Blue Ticks Today. What's Next - NDTV

Elon Musk steps on stage with 2-year-old son ‘X AE A-XII’ in rare outing – Daily Mail

Elon Musk was seen adorably playing with his 2-year-old son in a rare outing with the youngster at a Miami event Tuesday evening.

The entrepreneur shares the boy with his on-off-girlfriend Grimes, and he previously came under fire in 2020 when he bizarrely named the child 'X AE A-XII'.

Appearing on stage at Miami's Fontainebleau Hotel, the 2-year-old stole the show as his billionaire father joined a conference panel discussion.

Musk brought his son on stage to cheers from the crowd, while the boy appeared comfortable in the limelight as he enjoyed a cookie.

Named 'X AE A-XII', the boy stole the show as he joined Musk in Miami

The billionaire brought his 2-year-old son out on stage to raucous applause

Musk, 51, welcomed his son with musician Grimes in May 2020.

The billionaire has nine known children with three women, including another child via surrogate with Grimes named Exa Dark Siderl, which the couple had in December 2021.

Musk came under criticism after naming his son 'X AE A-XII', who goes by the nickname 'X', according to his musician ex-girlfriend.

Musk also fathered twin babies just month before his surrogate child with Grimes, with Shivon Zilis, an executive at his tech firm Neuralink.

'X AE A-XII' appeared comfortable in the limelight as he enjoyed a cookie on stage

Musk welcomed the child on stage while he joined a conference panel in Miami

The billionaire has nine known children with three women

Musk's love life has been the subject of intrigue for years, with the Space X founder going through a series of divorces and high-profile relationships in recent times.

He married his first wife, Justine Wilson, in 2000. Their first son Nevada tragically passed away at 10-weeks in 2002, before the couple welcomed twins Griffin and Xavier in 2004.

Musk and Wilson went on to have triplets, Kai, Saxon and Damian, in 2006, with all five children conceived via IVF.

The couple divorced in 2008, and Musk began dating British actress Talulah Riley, who has had starring roles in films such as Inception and Pride and Prejudice.

After tying the knot in 2010, their first marriage only lasted two years, and Riley reportedly walked away with $16 million in the divorce settlement.

Musk and his first wife, Justine Wilson, met while they were both attending Queen's University, and they tied the knot in 2000

Musk and Wilson split in 2008. Twins Griffin and Xavier are pictured with Musk and his second wife, Talulah, in 2015

Musk and Heard, pictured in 2017, began dating after the billionaire reportedly pursued her for several years

Musk and singer Grimes began dating in April 2018 after reportedly meeting online, a month before they made their red carpet debut at the Met Gala (pictured)

The couple then remarried the following summer, before again filing for divorce in December 2014. The divorce filings were withdrawn the following year, before Riley requested a divorce from Musk for the third and final time in 2016.

Musk then dated actress Amber Heard, 35, for several months in late 2016 and early 2017, after he reportedly pursued her for many years.

Heard's ex-husband, Johnny Depp, later accused Heard of cheating on him with Musk while they were still married, but both Musk and Heard denied the affair.

They split in the summer of 2017, and afterwards, he told Rolling Stone in 2017 that he was 'really in love' with Heard and that their breakup 'hurt bad.'

He would then begin dating singer Grimes in April 2018, and the eccentric couple captured headlines when they made their red carpet debut at the Met Gala the following month.

Amid a series of breakups and reconnections, the pair welcomed their son 'X AE A-XII' in May 2020. With the arrival of their second child the next year, Grimes shares two of Musk's nine children.

View original post here:

Elon Musk steps on stage with 2-year-old son 'X AE A-XII' in rare outing - Daily Mail

Elon Musk says he wants a ‘normal person’ for president in 2024 whose values are ‘smack in the middle of the country’ – Yahoo News

Elon Musk says he wants "just a normal person" as president.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The 2024 presidential election is a year away, but Elon Musk already knows who he wants to see in office.

Musk has praised and criticized Biden and Trump alike, and he now says he wants a "normal person" as president.

He told Fox News he'd like a president "whose values are smack in the middle of the country."

Elon Musk says the ideal presidential candidate for him is "just a normal person."

In an interview that aired Monday night on Fox News Channel's "Tucker Carlson Tonight," the billionaire discussed his voting history and who he'd be inclined to vote for in 2024.

"I didn't vote for Donald Trump. I actually voted for Biden. Not saying I'm a huge fan of Biden because I would think that would probably be inaccurate, but you know, we have difficult choices to make in the presidential elections," Musk said.

Looking ahead, Musk added, "I would prefer, frankly, that we put just a normal person as president, a normal person with common sense and whose values are smack in the middle of the country, just center of the normal distribution and I think that they would be great."

Musk has praised and criticized President Biden and Donald Trump alike in recent years. He's said the US and many other countries have a "gerontocracy," referring to a government controlled by citizens much older than most of the population. He's also called for maximum age limits for lawmakers and said politicians should be "ideally within 10 or at least, 20 years of the average age of the population."

Musk's outward political stances have shifted to the right in recent years. Last summer, he said he voted Republican for the first time, backing former Texas GOP Rep. Mayra Floresin a special election.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Continued here:

Elon Musk says he wants a 'normal person' for president in 2024 whose values are 'smack in the middle of the country' - Yahoo News

Elon Musk now says he wants to create a ChatGPT competitor to avoid ‘A.I. dystopia’he’s calling it ‘TruthGPT’ – CNBC

It seems Elon Musk wants to join the artificial intelligence arms race.

"I'm going to start something which I call TruthGPT," Musk told Fox News' "Tucker Carlson Tonight" on Monday, adding that he'd want his AI chatbot to be a "maximum truth-seeking AI that tries to understand the nature of the universe."

The timing of Musk's announcement which, to be clear, was not an actual product unveiling is notable, given that just three weeks ago, the Tesla and Twitter CEO signed an open letter calling for a six-month pause on all work on AI systems more powerful than OpenAI's ChatGPT-4.

Musk spoke about the dangers of rapid AI development before pitching his own version, alleging that chatbots like ChatGPT and Google's Bard are being trained to be "politically correct." He didn't provide evidence for those claims, or detail exactly what a "truth-seeking AI" might entail.

"A path to AI dystopia is to train AI to be deceptive," Musk said. "AI is more dangerous than, say, mismanaged aircraft design or production maintenance or bad car production ... [It] has the potential of civilization destruction."

Broadly speaking, that sentiment echoes a recent chorus of worries from tech luminaries and CEOs, including from billionaire investor Mark Cuban and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. Even Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai has weighed in, noting that Bard can "hallucinate" answers to human prompts writing responses that sound plausible, but are factually inaccurate.

"It could cause harm," Pichai told CBS News' "60 Minutes" on Sunday.

One of Musk's specific criticisms of OpenAI which he co-founded in 2015, and helped fund before leaving its board three years later centers around the organization's restructure from nonprofit to "capped-profit" in 2019, meant to help the company accept external funding.

That opened the door to a partnership with Microsoft, which helped train ChatGPT-4, OpenAI announced earlier this year. For-profit status could influence the ethics behind an AI program's development, Musk said on Monday.

Twitter which intends to pursue generative AI, Musk told the BBC last week is a for-profit company. So is X.AI, a new startup Musk quietly incorporated in Nevada last month.

Musk didn't immediately respond to CNBC Make It's request for comment. He admitted on Monday that he's "very late" to the chatbot race, but said he's still motivated to try due to concerns over the OpenAI-Microsoft partnership and Google dominating the market.

His timeline remains unclear, particularly considering his history of starting and then abandoning or indefinitely pausing ambitious projects, like The Boring Company's high-speed tunnels between major U.S. cities or Neuralink's computerized brain implants.

"I'm definitely starting late, but I will try to create a third option," Musk said. "This might be the best path to safety, in that an AI that cares about understanding the universe is unlikely to annihilate humans, because we are an interesting part of the universe."

DON'T MISS: Want to be smarter and more successful with your money, work & life?Sign up for our new newsletter!

Check out:

Read the rest here:

Elon Musk now says he wants to create a ChatGPT competitor to avoid 'A.I. dystopia'he's calling it 'TruthGPT' - CNBC

Elon Musk May Have Been Right, His Tesla Model Y Guess Could Come True – InsideEVs

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said some time ago that the Model Y would outsell all of Tesla's other cars, and by a wide margin. This came as a surprise since it's much more expensive than the popular Model 3. The CEO went on to predict that the Model Y would eventually become the best-selling car in the world. Many people thought he was crazy, but there's a much better chance of it actually happening than you might think.

When the Tesla Model Y first debuted, it was a bit of a disappointment to many people. The entire unveiling ceremony revolved around the history of Tesla, and the electric crossover was barely present. When it was finally shown, it wasn't shown in great detail, and there was no look at the third row. All you could really tell was that it wasn't much more than an inflated Model 3.

That said, the Model Y has been selling exceedingly well across the globe. In fact, it already made some top sales lists in 2022, and Tesla's sales stand to be much stronger in 2023. While many people love to pick on Elon Musk for his wild ideas and terrible timelines, he often proves them wrong. Sure, there are some promises Musk has made that have come true very late or still not come to fruition, but many of his dreams people doubted years ago are already a reality.

If all continues to move forward as it has thus far this year, Musk could have another "I told you so" moment.

27 Photos

According to Electrek, Musk said in 2016 that the Model Y would create demand for 500,000 to 1,000,000 units per year and eventually become the world's best-selling passenger car of any kind. Keep in mind, it didn't even come to market until 2020. In 2022, Tesla noted that the Model Y would soon keep pace with the top-selling Toyota Corolla, which sees some ~1.2 million units sold per year.

Tesla could inform us during its upcoming earnings meeting that the Model Y is already on track to become the best-selling car in the world as early as this year. It topped all rivals in China, the world's biggest automotive market, for Q1 2023. Meanwhile, in the world's second-largest car market, the US, early data points to the Model Y being the best-selling passenger car for the quarter.

The Model Y is also breaking sales records in many European markets, and Tesla has ramped up its production at Giga Berlin to 5,000 copies per week. Tesla is also ramping up production at Giga Texas while constantly making tweaks and upgrades in Fremont and Shanghai.

Tesla aims to produce some 1.8 million EVs globally in 2023, though Musk has said the company could possibly achieve 2 million. If everything falls into place as planned, the Model Y has a very good chance of being the best-selling car in the world.

What do you think? Leave us your words of wisdom in the comment section below.

Follow this link:

Elon Musk May Have Been Right, His Tesla Model Y Guess Could Come True - InsideEVs

Why Mark Zuckerberg And Elon Musk Fire Their Most Valuable People – Forbes

Here is an edited excerpt from this weeks CxO newsletter. To get this to your inbox, sign up here.

Elon Musk, like other tech peers, is wary of middle managers.

Growing up, I watched my dad cycle through several careers, from being a distributor of polyvinyl flooring to an independent bookseller. He called himself a salesman but Ive always thought his greatest job skill was managing a sales team, which he did for several global carpet companies. On car trips, wed listen to him reassure Helena, joke with Bob, debate tactics with Stan, and quote Winston Churchill to cheer up Mel. Textile tycoon Roger Milliken was celebrated as the boss whod tried to best Des Brady in a quote battle. At night, Id fall asleep to the sound of him telling my mom stories about the quirks and characters of office life.

With his dry Scottish wit and vague distrust of authority, my father wasnt what youd call a Company Man. The words private beach were practically marching orders to trespass. But his curiosity, competitive spirit and desire to help people get where they wanted to go made him a great manager.

Middle management is a tough place to be these days. Long before the pandemic even started, they were the unhappiest employees in most companies. Now, they have to deal with layoffs, tighter budgets, and pressure to meet their numbers while attending to the emotional wellbeing of people who may still be working from their bedrooms. Oh, and their boss thinks a bot could do their job.

I believe in the value of the middle manager, as do management thinkers like McKinseys Bill Schaninger, who believes theyre critical in driving large-scale organizational change. He is co-authoring a new book on the topic that will be out this summer and will be speaking at our upcoming Future of Work Summit on June 1st the day after hell be retiring from McKinsey to start his new adventure. In a recent article, Schaninger and colleagues argue that middle managers are less a symptom of bureaucracy than victims of it.

Managers are an especially vulnerable species in Silicon Valley, where startups often fumble from Lord-of-the-Flies-like chaos to plush seating and a plethora of cool new titles once the money comes in. (Time Ninja, youll be across the hall from our Dream Alchemist and Chief Happiness Engineer.) When the headwinds come, those who measure excellence in lines of code might look at that middle layer as a cost center to cut.

Exhibit A is Metas Mark Zuckerberg, who declared 2023 to be a Year of Efficiency a telling signal when the parent of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp already laid off 11,000 people the year before. Indeed, the company plans to close 5,000 open roles this year and lay off an additional 10,000 people, possibly starting today.

In a Q&A with employees earlier this year, reported in Command Line, Zuckerberg said, "I don't think you want a management structure that's just managers managing managers, managing managers, managing managers, managing the people who are doing the work."

That sounds like a Dystopian nightmare, or a sign that the Meta CEO may not be clear on what a number of his people actually do. Then again, this is a leader who equates being well understood with complacency, which cant have helped morale.

The same could be said of Elon Musk, who came into Twitter, tweeting that there seem to be 10 people managing for every one person coding.

Was the new Twitter CEO confusing functions like sales or, say, compliance with management? Possibly. He tends to recognize excellence in a form that reminds him of himself, which may explain why he says its hard to find people to delegate to. Musk also believes every manager should have the technical skills of the people they manage, even though studies suggest training in leadership skills may be more important. Certainly, middle managers are not to blame for the outages, misinformation, eroding value and general chaos at Twitter in recent months. If anything, the platform could use more good managers.

Instead, at Twitter and elsewhere, their numbers are likely to dwindle. Salesforce, Google and Amazon have also targeted middle management as areas to cut. In some ways, that makes sense. But lets distinguish between those who manage people and administrators whose functions add layers of bureaucracy. (Senior contributor William Baldwin lays out the compelling case to slash the ranks of administrators at Harvard.)

Great middle managers are the carriers of culture, the motivators of people, the agents of change. People tend to quit their boss, not their job, which makes nurturing better bosses a meaningful factor in a company's success.

During the last chapter of my dads career, he managed an independent bookstore with one employee and some occasional interns. He loved books but not that much. He seemed happiest when showing my son how to repair old books, dispensing life advice to the young woman working the cash register, or marching as Mr. Pickwick in the town parade. Like a lot of great middle managers, he was a teacher, a mentor and a coach. We could all use more of those right now, especially as technology transforms how we work.

Excerpt from:

Why Mark Zuckerberg And Elon Musk Fire Their Most Valuable People - Forbes

Elon Musk Fires Guy in Charge of Making Him Look Like Shit All the … – Hard Drive

SAN FRANCISCO Elon Musks latest wave of firings has seen the dismissalof the man formerly in charge of making sure the Twitter CEO looked like absolute hell every time you saw him, sources have confirmed.

Damn, not sure Ill be able to find more work in this field, said Cal Harper, who up until recently was in charge of laying out Musks awkwardly fitting wardrobe and coaching him on how to look out of place no matter what he was doing. I thought he was joking when he brought me onboard a while ago to make sure he looked uncomfortable and inhuman on every occasion both public and private, but you know, I wasnt going to say no to the money. This was the best job I ever had. He sent my family on a vacation after those pictures of him on that boat worked out so well for us.

Musk defended the move, stating that he had learned enough to perform the tasks himself.

Probably going to do his job from here on out, he said. No reason to pay someone to apply skin pastener and fuck my hair all up when Im perfectly capable of doing it myself. Based on current trends, cases of me looking weird and bloated and making those dumb faces should be down to zero by late April.

As of press time, the full time employee that was paid to hang around and talk about how strong Musks meme game was had also been dismissed.

Read the original post:

Elon Musk Fires Guy in Charge of Making Him Look Like Shit All the ... - Hard Drive

Elon Musk aims to charm marketers with vow to focus on ‘compelling … – Digiday

The centerpiece of the first day of the inaugural Possible conference in Miami Beach took place yesterday when Elon Musk the polarizing but brilliant founder of Tesla and Starlink, and current owner of Twitter took to the main stage to offer up his version of what Twitter is doing to address the concerns of brand marketers about brand safety on the platform.

In a conversation with NBC Universals global chair of advertising & partnerships Linda Yaccarino who is seen by many as a possible candidate for the CEO position at Twitter, which is currently occupied by his dog Floki Musk talked of championing citizen journalism while also deriding mainstream media, vowing he would be treated the same way as anyone else on Twitter, and promising freedom of speech while limiting hate speech through a series of community controls.

People may not be aware of this already, but we have adjacency controls in place that are really quite effective, Musk told the packed mainstage room where hundreds recorded his comments on their cell phone cameras even after it was rumored that electronic recordings of the session somehow would not be permitted. Additionally, Musk took a handful (several overly fawning), questions from the audience after it was expressly said he would do no such thing.

Whether Musk, who charmed the audience and even got applause for his freedom of speech position, holds true to his words remains to be seen. He certainly tried to woo the roomful of marketers with some of his messaging. Advertising goes all the way from spam to compelling content, he said. And I really want to focus on obviously the compelling content, to make it relevant, make it interesting.

Rishad Tobaccowala, an author, speaker and advisor who for decades was a high-ranking executive with Publicis Groupe, offered his thoughts on Musks comments in a video segment below with Digiday immediately following the Twitter owners session with Yaccarino.

https://digiday.com/?p=500154

Visit link:

Elon Musk aims to charm marketers with vow to focus on 'compelling ... - Digiday

Elon Musk: No magical cure for inflation – Fox Business

Twitter CEO Elon Musk shared his business perspective on inflation and the emerging banking crisis on Tucker Carlson Tonight.

Billionaire Elon Musk warned Tuesday that the inflationary pressures which have wreaked havoc on the U.S. economy over the last year will persist until economic productivity increases.

Musk said in an appearance on Fox News "Tucker Carlson Tonight" that the turmoil caused by the banking crisis and difficulties in the commercial and residential real estate markets is a symptom of the Federal Reserves efforts to tamp down inflation through higher interest rates. He noted that "inflation is going to happen no matter what. If you increase the money supply, you get inflation."

"Theres not some magical cure for getting rid of inflation except to increase the productivity, the output of goods and services," Musk said. "So, what is money? Youve got these sort of its basically numbers in a database that comes up with some total. Then youve got the output of goods and services of the economy, and as long as the ratio of money to ratio of goods and services stays if that stays constant, you have no inflation. If you add more to the system faster than you increase goods and services, then you have inflation."

ELON MUSK SAYS TWITTER HAD MANY EMPLOYEES BUT LITTLE PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT

Elon Musk attends the 2022 Met Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 2, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue) (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue / Getty Images)

Inflation reached 40-year highs in 2022, which prompted the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates. Prices surged in the wake of federal spending and deficits reaching record levels following the enactment of a series of pandemic relief measures.

Inflation remains elevated and prices were up 5% year-over-year in March more than double the Feds target rate of 2%.

"So, all of these COVID sort of stimulus bills were not paid for. They just generated more currency," Musk continued. "More, you know, more money was created because the federal government, the checks always pass, you know, unless you hit a debt limit, which theres probably going to be some debt limit crisis later this year."

ELON MUSK LAUNCHES NEW ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE COMPANY, X.AI

Billionaire Elon Musk, who is the CEO of Tesla, SpaceX and Twitter, recently launched an artificial intelligence company called X.AI. (REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo / Reuters Photos)

"But provided you havent hit the debt limit, the federal government, unlike state governments or city governments or individuals, can simply issue more money. And thats what they did. As the old saying goes, theres no free lunch," Musk added.

The billionaire then asked, "So if you could just issue massive amounts of money without negative consequences, why dont we just take that to the limit, make everyone a trillionaire? Well, I mean they tried that in Venezuela, howd that work out?"

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Carlson responded, "Well, they had to eat zoo animals."

"Right. Its not good, you know. Theres no free lunch. Theres not some ability to issue money and not have inflation," Musk said.

Follow this link:

Elon Musk: No magical cure for inflation - Fox Business

Elon Musk warns Tucker Carlson: The feds are in your Twitter DMs – Reason

Who's that sliding into your Twitter DMs? Is it the federal government? Well, according to Elon Musk, who took over the social media platform last year, government bureaucrats were routinely taking a close look at users' content.

Thanks to the Twitter Files, a collaboration between Elon Musk and independent journalists, as well as the Facebook Files, my own investigative project for Reason, we now know that social media companies constantly faced pressure to censor speechand that pressure was coming from the government. The State Department, the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and even the White House all targeted legitimate online speech. Federal law enforcement agents flagged tweets and posts for deletion under the guise of protecting national security.

And no one should be surprised. The feds love to invoke national security, and then take away more of your rights and pretend they're keeping you safe.

Well, guess what: They're at it again. Following a massive leak of U.S. intelligence documents that were posted on Discord, another social media platform, the Biden administration wants more power to monitor online chat rooms.

A senior administration official told NBC News that the government "is now looking at expanding the universe of online sites that intelligence agencies and law enforcement authorities track."

That's bad. We know where it will lead: More government surveillance of the American people, and eventually, more censorship of political speech. In the runup to the 2020 election, for example, the FBI warned social media sites to be wary of Russian-based disinformation. But then they also started flagging joke tweets written by Americans that happened to be about the election.

You see, the feds just can't help themselves: They'll use the new powers we give them to pressure the internet to shut down dissent. We've seen it happen time and again.

So let's keep the government out of our chatrooms. And watch out for your DMs.Photos: Javier Rojas/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Michael Ho Wai Lee/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; BOB STRONG/UPI/Newscom; Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom

Music: "New CarInstrumental" by Rex Banner via Artlist

View original post here:

Elon Musk warns Tucker Carlson: The feds are in your Twitter DMs - Reason

Is Elon Musk creating a utopian city? The hellish, heavenly history of company towns – The Guardian

Housing

The Tesla founder has broken ground on a plot in Texas, while Google and Meta are building workers homes in California. Should we be celebrating or worrying?

Welcome to Snailbrook, Texas. Established: 2021. Population: about 12, but with many more to come. In fact, in a decade or two, Snailbrook could be a gleaming, utopian city, shaped by the futuristic vision of the unavoidable tech titan of our day, Elon Musk.

Musk is moving into Texas big time. According to reports, he has quietly bought as many as 2,430 hectares (6,000 acres) in the Austin area where his core business, Tesla, has been headquartered since 2021 upon which factories and facilities are under construction for the rocket company SpaceX and the tunnelling company Boring (whose mascot is a snail, hence the towns name). Now, Musk is adding housing for workers (which reportedly will be more affordable to rent than that in Austin) and Boring executives are talking of building an entire city. Should we be celebrating or worrying?

Corporation-built towns tend to go one of two ways: heavenly or hellish, but usually the second. On the one hand, companies want to build a place that attracts and nurtures its employees; on the other, they want to minimise overheads and squeeze as much out of their captive townsfolk as they can get away with.

Overriding all of this is the temptation for the founders (almost always white men) to build monuments to themselves and rule like dictators. Given Musks reputation for impulsive heavy-handedness and extreme attention-seeking, this does not bode well. But this is the guy who promises to colonise Mars, so it is worth examining what he is doing down here on Earth.

What will Musktopia look like? Details are scant. As well as factories, the Snailbrook site in Bastrop county, about 35 miles outside Austin hosts 12 prefab trailer homes and a depressing-looking outdoor recreation area. Plans submitted to the county in January, called Project Amazing Phase I, show basic outlines of a few streets with Boring-themed names Boring Boulevard, Waterjet Way, Cutterhead Crossing fringed by blank plots for 110 more detached homes. Where the streets meet the adjacent parcel of land, they simply end, promising more to come.

If there is a vision for Snailbrook, it has yet to emerge. If anything, Musk and co have tried to keep the scheme a secret and it might have worked if it werent for inquisitive neighbours such as Chap Ambrose, a computer programmer who lives nearby and has flown drones over the site. The work that they have done so far does not give me confidence that theres a masterplan, he says. You see the public documents, and you see the way they work, what they do and have to redo. The grand vision is unclear at this point, I guess, is a nice way to say it.

In some ways, Snailbrook is similar to the first American company towns, which sprang up in the 19th century as industries such as mining, textiles and steelworks sought to house large numbers of workers in remote or sparsely populated areas. Employees would have to take what they were offered usually tents or basic wooden shacks housing several families. At best, there might be a church or a school, plus a company-owned store, which would often earn back what the company paid its workers or lead them into debt.

They were often closer to prison camps than ideal cities. Colorado coal-mining towns owned by John D Rockefeller were policed by armed guards, who prevented anyone entering or leaving. An inspector visiting one in 1910 wrote that the miners dwellings smack of the direst poverty Not all of the houses are equipped with water, and practically none have sewerage The people reflect their surroundings; slatternly dressed women and unkempt children throng the dirty streets and alleys of the camp.

When the miners went on strike over their conditions in 1913, the conflict turned violent, culminating in the Ludlow Massacre of April 1914. The National Guard attacked the strikers tent city on the companys behalf, killing at least 19 people, including a dozen children.

Even in more peaceable settlements, paternalistic captains of industry sought to control every aspect of their worker-citizens lives. In Lowell, Massachusetts, established in the 1820s by the cotton magnate Francis Cabot Lowell, the workforce was overwhelmingly young, single and female (women were cheaper than men). Lowell had rigid ideas about how his employees should conduct themselves. They slept in dormitories, rose to a bell at 4.30am and worked 12-hour days. They were forbidden from swearing, talking during work or drinking alcohol, while attendance at church was compulsory. The Lowell girls did at least receive some education, via evening classes (if they could stay awake), which meant many were able to leave after a few years to enter a less gruelling profession.

The idea of the company town as a utopian model took root in Britain in the late 19th century, where reforming industrialists sought an alternative to the urban squalor endured by most of their factory workers. The result was model villages, closer to the garden city philosophy, with quality housing and plenty of fresh air and green space. The idea was to keep workers happy, healthy and productive.

Many of them still stand today: Creswell in Derbyshire, built by the local coal-mining company; Titus Salts Saltaire and Joseph Rowntrees New Earswick in Yorkshire; Port Sunlight on the Wirral, founded by William Lever to house workers at his soap factory; and the textbook example, Bournville, near Birmingham, built by the Cadbury family.

Despite indulging Britains sweet tooth, George Cadbury was an abstemious Quaker and a visionary social reformer, says Peter Richmond, the chief executive of the Bournville Village Trust. I think what really drove him was: How can I tackle the inequalities and the social ills and the problems that I see in the inner city? This was about benefiting the population of Birmingham, and dealing with the challenges in Birmingham, as much as having a good local workforce.

In 1893, Cadbury began buying up rural land to the south-west of Birmingham and laying out a low-density village, alongside the young architect William Alexander Harvey. There were semi-detached cottages in a variety of architectural styles, with modern conveniences and large gardens (each with a fruit tree). There were parks and allotments, schools, hospitals, a swimming pool and a sports ground, but no pubs; the Quakers still had boundaries. Another part of the estate had a sort of country retreat for children from the inner cities, says Richmond. About 20,000 children a year came out just to enjoy two weeks in decent air in what would have then been the countryside.

Crucially, Bournville was not exclusively a workers town: Cadbury employees made up only 50% of its population. In 1900, Cadbury put the Bournville estate under the control of an independent charitable trust, which still manages it today. So unlike in many company towns, residents tenancy was not dependent on their employment status. Bournville remains a nice place to live, says Richmond, with a mix of private and social housing (but still no pubs).

American industrialists were thinking along similar lines to those in Britain, albeit with more capitalism and less philanthropy, resulting in factory towns such as Hershey, Pennsylvania (what is it with chocolate companies?) and Pullman, Chicago, founded by the railway-carriage maker George Pullman.

Pullman was even grander than Bournville, featuring modern brick houses with gas and running water, grand civic buildings, parks and hotels (but, again, no bars serving alcohol). But when a recession hit in 1893, Pullman fired hundreds of his workers or lowered their wages by up to 30%, while keeping their rents and utility charges the same. Already fed up with Pullmans feudal reign, the townsfolk went on strike. Railway workers across the country joined in and the National Guard had to be called in to get the trains running again. A few years later, the Illinois supreme court ordered the company to sell the town.

If there is one utopian whom Musk brings to mind, though, it is Walt Disney. Like Musk, Disney was a committed futurist with an almost boyish belief in technologys liberating potential (albeit combined with socially conservative values). Like Musk, Disney sought to put his ideas into action by secretly buying up large tracts of land in central Florida the area that is now Disney World.

Just as the Disney corporation negotiated concessions from state authorities to effectively police and service its Florida domain (which the governor, Ron DeSantis, is trying to strip away over Disneys defence of LGBTQ+ rights), so Musk was attracted by Texass relatively low taxes and loose planning regulations. As Ambrose puts it: As a Texas landowner, you can pretty much do damn well what you want.

Disneys vision for the Florida site was to build Epcot the experimental prototype community of tomorrow. Epcot was to be a city of constant change, a test lab for new technologies; corporations would provide advance models of appliances such as televisions and microwave ovens to every home. However, Disney alone would dictate those changes; citizens would be allowed to live there for a maximum of three years, so no one would acquire voting rights.

Architecturally, Disneys unrealised scheme makes a lot of sense by todays standards. Epcot was laid out like a garden city, with concentric rings of homes and green belts around a compact city centre that was to be air-conditioned, pedestrian and car-free. Cars were banished to the periphery, while public transport was to be provided by electric people movers, like those at Disneys theme parks, and a high-speed monorail. Musks hyperloop concept of transportation via underground tunnels (for which Boring was created) could almost be seen as a successor.

If Musk was to try to do what Walt tried to do, its sort of 40 years too late, says Sam Gennawey, a Disney historian and urban planner. Hes not being like Walt Disney and visionary in the sense of: Im going to create a different kind of community. What Musk is doing is much more akin to Pullman or Lowell, where its just housing nearby owned by the guy who owns the company. Its basically an economic decision thats being made. Is the architecture gonna look cool? Damn, I hope so. At least, betterlooking than his cars.

Corporate utopias have taken a different form in the 21st century. Rather than building model towns, the tech titans of Silicon Valley have ploughed their energies into their campuses, hiring world-class architects (Norman Foster in the case of Apple, Bjarke Ingels and Thomas Heatherwick for Google, Frank Gehry for Facebook) and building sealed-off enclaves offering free facilities: restaurants and cafes, beauty spas, jogging tracks, health centres, games arcades all the amenities of real cities, but without the distracting civilians. This is the most dystopian model of all. Rather than work with us and well give you nice housing, the message seems to have become why go home when you could live at work?

Musk has taken this logic to its extreme. Shortly after taking over Twitter and firing half the companys workforce, Musk demanded long hours at high intensity of the remaining employees, even installing beds in Twitters San Francisco offices. The local building regulators were not best pleased. Perhaps Musk has decided he can get away with more in Texas.

There are signs the tide is turning, however. Musk is not the only one taking another look at the idea of company towns. Google plans to build three neighbourhoods around its headquarters in Mountain View, in the Bay Area, with 7,000 homes 20% of which will be affordable. Meanwhile, in Menlo Park, Facebooks owner, Meta, is working on Willow Village, a mixed-use neighbourhood including 1,700 residential units, developed collaboratively with and for our neighbours and the broader community, a spokesperson says.

Ironically, the company that is setting the standard for corporate town-building is one that has helped destroy many American towns: Walmart. The worlds largest retailer started in Bentonville, Arkansas, in 1950 and has never left. It is building a huge campus there, but it has also added to the citys infrastructure and amenities, most conspicuously with the $400m (250m) Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, which opened in 2011 and is free to visit. As well as a huge art collection, it includes public spaces, ponds, outdoor concerts and nature trails.

Drawn by Walmarts economic gravity, hundreds of other retailers have also set up shop in Bentonville. The byproduct of that is theyve infused a huge working population within walking distance of the Bentonville business district, says Gennawey. It has all the amenities of a beautiful small southern town, with every store full and lots of activity and people walking around and sitting in the square. So, quite honestly, if Walmart offered me a job, Id really think about it.

If Snailbrook is to be a success, this is the kind of thing Musk will have to do, although there is little indication he is leaning in this direction so far. If there is a lesson to be learned from the history, it could be that company towns work best when their creators put civic responsibility over egotistical urges and employee wellbeing over corporate profit. Does that sound like Musk?

{{topLeft}}

{{bottomLeft}}

{{topRight}}

{{bottomRight}}

{{.}}

Read more:

Is Elon Musk creating a utopian city? The hellish, heavenly history of company towns - The Guardian

Elon Musk says Tesla likely to launch full self-drive technology ‘this year’ – Indiatimes.com

SAN FRANCISCO: Elon Musk said on Wednesday that electric vehicle (EV) giant Tesla likely will launch full self-drive technology this year and generate significant profits that offset some of the margin pressure it's facing due to aggressive price cuts."I hesitate to say this but I think we'll do it this year," said Tesla CEO Musk, speaking on a conference. Musk has missed his previous targets to achieve self-driving capability dating back years.The test version of what Tesla calls Full Self-Driving (FSD) software will be "two steps forward, one step back between releases," Musk said, "but the trend is very clearly towards full self driving, towards full autonomy."The technology as it stands now has drawn legal and regulatory scrutiny following crashes. Tesla has said the technology does not make the car autonomous, and requires driver supervision.Tesla's financial chief Zachary Kirkhorn said its automotive margin in the first quarter was hurt not only by price cuts, but also increased deferred revenue for FSD software and that 'this deferral should get recognized once some of the software catches up'.Kirkhorn did not elaborate.Guidehouse Insights analyst Sam Abuelsamid said Tesla is making some changes to the car's hardware, which disables some FSD features on newer vehicles temporarily.Tesla sells FSD software as an option for as much as $15,000.Late last year, Tesla removed ultrasonic sensors from Model 3 and Model Y cars, and said some features such as 'smart summon' and 'autopark' would be temporarily unavailable."We do have this unique strategic advantage," Musk said. "We are making a car that, if autonomy pans out, that asset will be worth a hell of a lot more in the future than it is now."Tesla reported a lower-than-expected quarterly margin on Wednesday but Musk said he would prioritise sales growth over profits in a weak economy.

Original post:

Elon Musk says Tesla likely to launch full self-drive technology 'this year' - Indiatimes.com

Too many countries are freaking out about population the way Elon Musk hasand its hurting women worldwide, the UN says – Yahoo Finance

While Elon Musk worries about too few babies and climate activists predict an overpopulation crisis, the United Nations is warning that the bigger threat could be alarmism on either side of the population debate.

More from Fortune: 5 side hustles where you may earn over $20,000 per yearall while working from home Looking to make extra cash? This CD has a 5.15% APY right now Buying a house? Here's how much to save This is how much money you need to earn annually to comfortably buy a $600,000 home

Clashing fears of overpopulation and underpopulation are pushing countries to act to either lower, increase, or stabilize their birth rates, according to a new report by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) published Wednesday.

But reasonable concerns could be morphing into population alarmism, according to the report, risking potentially dangerous new policies that might undermine yearslong efforts to improve basic human rights and gender equality.

This alarmism poses real risks, the report said. One, that population anxiety will distract us from serious but solvable problems, and two, that population anxiety will become a rationale for denying the rights and bodily autonomy of women and girls.

Concerns about population have hit a fever pitch recently. When the world population exceeded 8 billion people in November, fears of overpopulation spread in sub-Saharan Africa, where eight countries will account for more than half of global population growth from now to 2050, according to the UN.

Officials in the region say the demographic struggles stem from population growing faster than economies, and that countries lack enough time and resources to build the infrastructure and food systems necessary to ensure every citizen has access to enough resources.

But at the same time, stalling birth rates in the developed world that fell even lower during the COVID-19 pandemic have sparked fears of the opposite phenomenon: underpopulation. Tesla and Twitter CEO Musk is among the more vocal advocates of higher birth rates, arguing that economies and civilization could collapse if the world runs out of enough young people. A collapsing birth rate is the biggest danger civilization faces by far, he tweeted last year while confirming he had recently fathered twins, his eighth and ninth children.

Story continues

The two doomsday scenarios have elicited a range of policy reactions. Countries with fast-rising populations like Nigeria have recently overhauled their policies to expand access to family counseling and planning. Meanwhile, birth control has become much harder to access in wealthier European nations including Croatia and Poland.

It is true that birth rates in many countries, including the U.S., have for several decades been below the replacement rate needed to maintain population levels. This has sparked fears of looming economic catastrophe, as not enough young workers are entering the labor force in developed countries to replace the rising number of retirees. The situation could, in turn, lead to economic trouble as public spending on health care, long-term care, and pensions increases.

But while reasonable solutions to these problems exist, the UN report found that the burden of slowing birth rates tends to largely fall on women who choose to delay having a family or avoid it altogether. The blame, in many contexts, is laid at the feet of women, who are often castigated for rejecting marriage and motherhood, the report said, adding that in many parts of the world declining population is fueling policies that call for a return to a submissive model of femininity and traditional family and gender values.

The report found that recent policy changes in countries such as Poland and Turkey have not only limited access to contraceptives, they also reduce paid government services for counseling and reproductive health care and cut back on sex education in schools.

The UN also warned against conflating demographic adjustments as the only remedy to global issues such as climate change, saying that overpopulation and underpopulation risk becoming a scapegoat for many problems. Instead, the report recommended voluntary family planning services, education on reproductive health, and expanded access to birth control and abortion as ways to fix demographic issues without impeding human rights.

The UN cautioned against enforced, top-down decisions prescribing fertility rates, as economic benefits would likely be at the expense of equality, human rights, and progress, and could limit the essential goal of empowering women and girls to exercise choice over their own bodies and futures.

It isnt the first time the UN has warned population alarmism could worsen demographic issues. Last year, as the global population neared the 8 billion mark, UNFPA executive director Natalia Kanem said rising population was not a cause for fear, and that history showed population control policies ranging from restrictions on contraceptives to forced sterilization are often ineffective and even dangerous.

We cannot repeat the egregious violations of human rightsthat rob women of their ability to decide whether [or] when to become pregnant, if at all. Population alarmism: It distracts us from what we should be focused on, she said.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

More from Fortune: 5 side hustles where you may earn over $20,000 per yearall while working from homeLooking to make extra cash? This CD has a 5.15% APY right nowBuying a house? Here's how much to saveThis is how much money you need to earn annually to comfortably buy a $600,000 home

See original here:

Too many countries are freaking out about population the way Elon Musk hasand its hurting women worldwide, the UN says - Yahoo Finance

Ironic twist: MrBeast paid by Elon Musk for Twitter subscription – WNCT

(Beast Philanthropy Productions via AP)

GREENVILLE, NC (WNCT) MrBeast took to Twitter on Tuesday to share some irony Elon Musk is now subscribed to his Twitter profile.

MrBeast speaks out on transphobic comments made about one of his collaborators, Chris Tyson

Elon Musk is now paying me $5 a month, whos really in charge now, MrBeast, also known as Jimmy Donaldson, tweeted.

MrBeast named one of the most influential people by Time magazine

The post started going viral just hours after being uploaded. Now, a day later, it has more than 30.5 million views.

MrBeast visits Harvard, teaches business class

Musk bought Twitter in October 2022 and is attempting to make the platform more creator-friendly by monetizing subscriptions to accounts. For $4.50 a month, content creators with enough followers and activity on the app will be able to charge Twitter users for exclusive posts.

Note: Were going to spotlight events, videos and other social posts that revolve around MrBeast, who lives in Greenville, and all the great work he does online, in the community and around the country. To follow MrBeast, click here:

YouTube|TikTok|Instagram|Twitter|Facebook

Here is the original post:

Ironic twist: MrBeast paid by Elon Musk for Twitter subscription - WNCT

Elon Musks dad Errol says he can prove existence of emerald mine in new bombshell claim revealing its lo… – The US Sun

ELON Musks dad Errol claims he bankrolled his billionaire sons escape from South Africa to America with emeralds from an under the table mine in Zambia.

The Tesla CEO, 51, last week offered a million Dogecoin (almost $93,000 at the time of writing) to anyone who can prove the existence of the mine his dad supposedly owned.

He has previously slammed the claim, saying: The fake emerald mine thing is so annoying. Like where exactly is this thing anyway!?

But in an exclusive interview with The U.S. Sun, Errol claimed it was his emerald venture which helped pave the way for Elon to become a wildly successful captain of industry in the U.S.

Describing the moment he heard of the Dogecoin cryptocurrency reward, Errol joked: When I read that, I wondered, Can I enter, because I can prove it existed.

Elon knows its true. All the kids know about it. My daughter has three or four emerald pendants.

Elon saw them (the emeralds) at our house. He knew I was selling them.

To prove his point, Errol provided pics of some of the bright green precious gemstones, which he says came from the mine.

He explained that it is in the Lake Tanganyika region of Zambia, the second biggest emerald-producing country in the world after Colombia.

But Errol admits it was far from being a conventional mining setup - and that might explain why Elon is so sure no one can prove its existence.

Errol says he first stumbled into the emerald business while flying from South Africa en route to the UK to sell a Cessna Golden Eagle plane.

Landing at an airstrip near Zambias northern borders with Tanzania and what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, he met and befriended the Italian owner of the airstrip.

It turned out the Italian-employed locals dig out emeralds deep in the Zambian bush and Errol decided to go into business with him.

The workers would bring them in for shipment to Errol in what the retired electromechanical engineer described as an under the table operation.

The Italian business partner would then pay the locals around $2 a load, enough to feed an entire family for a month, Errol says.

He explained: What Elon is saying is that there was no formal mine.It was a rock formation protruding from the ground in the middle of nowhere.

There was no mining company. There are no signed agreements or financial statements.

No one owned anything. The deal was done on a handshake with the Italian man at a time when Zambia was a free for all.

Not even he knew exactly where the border was. At that time, it was like the Wild West.

Errol can only say for sure that the deposit was about 40 miles from where he had landed his Cessna in Kasaba Bay, which is now a tourist hub.

Explaining why he thinks that Elon has pushed back on the emerald mine story, Errol said: Elon's main concern is not to appear to be a 'trust fund kid who got everything given to him on a plate.

That's what his nay-sayers are pushing. It's not true. Elon took risks and worked like blazes to be where he is today.

The emeralds helped us through a very trying time in South Africa, when people were fleeing the country in droves, including his mother's whole family, and earning opportunities were at an all-time low. That's all.

Describing how he used the proceeds from the emeralds to set Elon and his brother Kimbal on a new path, Errol said: In the late 1980s, Elon was doing a business degree at the University of Pretoria.

But he was very unhappy there. The last straw for him was when someone stole his expensive bicycle I had bought him.

One day, I found him in bed looking depressed. It was heartbreaking to see him like that.

I said to him, You're not very happy, Elon, are you? He said, No.

And suddenly, it came to me out of the blue to ask him, 'Would you like to go and study in the United States?

He looked up at me, his face beaming and exclaimed, Yes!

Ten days later, Elon left South Africa with a return ticket for a year for America with emerald money in his pocket.

Elon first spent a year working for the Bank of Nova Scotia in Canada between 1989 and 1990.

Then, he enrolled on a scholarship at the University of Pennsylvanias Wharton Business School, one of the top business schools in the world.

Errol said: During that time, I managed to send money Id made from emerald sales to him and Kimbal for living expenses.

But when the bottom dropped out of the emerald business due to the emergence of a cheaper lab-made version of the gemstone, Errol had to sell assets to keep cash flowing to his sons.

He unsuccessfully tried to cash in on his share in a game farm, so was forced to his ocean-going yacht for R100,000 (then around $29,000), a quarter of its value.

Errol says he then had to send the cash via an Israeli broker because of strict exchange control regulations.

He explained: I took a hell of a chance because people I knew were sent to jail for doing a similar thing.

I managed to send them about R400,000 (then around $115,000) in total.

It helped them with rent and food. Kimbal told me that they could never have survived without the money.

Elon has previously claimed that he arrived in Canada in 1989 with just CA$2,500 and paid his own way through college, ending with $100,000 in student debt.

But despite repeatedly stating that there is no evidence of an emerald mine, he has reportedly admitted that it did exist - and that he visited it.

According to fact-checking website Snopes, Elon said in a since-deleted interview with Forbes in July 2014: This is going to sound slightly crazy, but my father also had a share in an Emerald mine in Zambia.

I was 15 and really wanted to go with him but didnt realize how dangerous it was.

I couldnt find my passport, so I ended up grabbing my brothers - which turned out to be six months overdue.

So, we had this planeload of contraband and an overdue passport from another person.

There were AK-47s all over the place and Im thinking, Man, this could really go bad.

The U.S. Sun has reached out to Elon Musk for comment.

Visit link:

Elon Musks dad Errol says he can prove existence of emerald mine in new bombshell claim revealing its lo... - The US Sun