Thursday, June 11, 2026
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Race-obsessed, untouchable Musk hits escape velocity from CEO rulebook

PUBLISHED·3h ago·4 min read

Elon Musk is on the verge of financial immortality: The world's richest man — and potentially its first trillionaire — has built a sovereign corporate kingdom that is too systemic to fail.And yet, on the eve of SpaceX's monster IPO, its CEO was hunkered down in his digital fiefdom stoking far-right culture wars with an impunity unmatched in modern corporate history.Why it matters: Musk's years in the public eye, marked by serial controversy and an accelerating embrace of white identitarian politics, have inured investors to conduct that would be disqualifying for almost any other CEO.Nothing Musk says or does can dent Wall Street's appetite for a stake in his future-forging empire.Look no further than SpaceX's $1.75 trillion IPO, where demand for shares has already vastly outstripped the available supply ahead of Friday's historic market debut.Zoom in: Anti-immigration riots erupted in Belfast on Tuesday night after graphic footage of a brutal street stabbing, allegedly by a Sudanese migrant, ricocheted across X.Masked mobs set fire to vehicles, a city bus, and several homes, marching through neighborhoods while chanting "foreigners out" and forcing minority families to flee under police protection.Musk, who posts near-daily about violence committed by migrants, shared British far-right activist Tommy Robinson's list of locations to protest against "another invader attack on our people.""Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!" Musk declared to his 240 million followers, drawing allegations of incitement from British leaders.Zoom out: Musk's intervention in Belfast followed weeks of fixation on Henry Nowak, the white British teenager whose murder by a British Sikh man ignited a far-right backlash over claims of "anti-white" policing.Musk's anti-migrant activism extends across Western countries, where he suggests elites are intentionally engineering the demographic erasure of white populations — also known as the "Great Replacement" theory.In the U.S., Musk has been relentlessly focused on non-citizen voter fraud, claiming that Democrats are harvesting illegal immigrant votes to create a permanent, one-party state.That includes in California, where he joined MAGA allies this week in alleging, without evidence, that Democrats committed massive fraud in the Los Angeles mayoral primary.Between the lines: Musk's worldview relies on a singular, apocalyptic thesis: that Western civilization — which he frequently equates with white culture — is being systematically dismantled by mass migration, demographic change and "woke" institutions.He has clashed with world leaders like British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has accused the tech billionaire of using his platform to "whip up division" and interfere in foreign democracies."Murderous migrants beheading innocent people in their home town is what's making people angry, not "social media!" Musk posted Wednesday in response to allegations of incitement.Musk rejects characterizations of his rhetoric as racist or xenophobic, arguing that those accusations have been weaponized to shut down debate on migration and crime.The big picture: As Musk's personal net worth rockets toward the thirteen-figure mark, he has achieved escape velocity from the traditional rules of corporate governance.A decade ago, a CEO amplifying white-identitarian panic at home and overseas would have triggered a board crisis, investor revolt and days of corporate cleanup.Musk does it daily, in public, in real time, on the platform he owns. His companies have become critical infrastructure, and Trump-era politics have shifted the Overton window on the rhetoric of racial grievance.If SpaceX's massive valuation secures it an eventual spot in the S&P 500, ordinary Americans with standard index funds or retirement accounts will soon own a stake in Musk's empire — whether they like it or not.The bottom line: Asked Wednesday why the world's richest man spends his days in a bitter online culture war instead of enjoying his billions on a beach, Musk posted: "Nothing else matters if civilization falls."

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