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Episode: 2508
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Title: HPR2508: False Prophets
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2508/hpr2508.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:23:09
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---
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This in HPR episode 2,518 titled False Profits, it is hosted by Lost in Drunks and in about
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9 minutes long and can remain an explicit flag.
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The summary is Lost in Drunks' Considant Power Cult on Personality May Effect Space Exploration.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honest Host.com.
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Hello, this is Lost in Drunks.
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Today I'd like to talk about something that I'm going to call Beware of False Profits.
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I guess it's just my thoughts about the recent achievements of the company SpaceX owned by Elon Musk and a bunch of other people.
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It's a four-crafted company with shares to sell, so it's not like it's his only.
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But when we think of that, we think of him.
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And of course, Elon Musk is the guy behind Tesla and a bunch of other ventures in the past.
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Software ventures that were very, very profitable.
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PayPal was his, I believe.
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So let me start off by saying, I'm a really huge admirer of Elon Musk and the things he's done.
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I really, really like his cars.
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I would love to be able to afford one.
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Maybe someday he'll make one that I can't afford.
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That would be a great thing.
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You know, I've often believed that Electric is definitely the future and it seems like the entire auto industry has seen the handwriting on the wall as well, finally.
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And it's primarily due to this man and his dream and his drive and his tenacity and his intelligence because he's a very, very smart man.
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Well, he also does SpaceX.
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And SpaceX, as pretty much everybody knows, is a space company.
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They build rockets to put things in outer space.
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Most recently, they tested their Falcon Heavy rocket, which at that time, you know, in history, it was the most powerful rocket in the world.
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If you're listening to this sometime in the future, you are doubtlessly aware of others that are more powerful, that are coming about.
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SpaceX has one of their own.
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In fact, they say they're not really going to be using the Falcon Heavy much at all.
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It's a stepping stone to the next size up, which they want to use to put a lot of either satellites in orbit, space equipment in orbit, or as the first step for interplanetary exploration.
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Because Musk has stated on many occasions that he believes we need to be going to Mars.
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Well, this is another thing that I believe that I agree with and that I admire about the man.
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I too believe that this species is doomed, so long as we're stuck on this rock.
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It won't happen tomorrow, it won't happen the day after tomorrow, but at some point or other, history has shown us that extinction level events do occur.
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And sometimes people try to see patterns in this, they try to guess, well, we're a long way away from one bubble.
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But the fact is we could have a global killer asteroid or cometary object hit the earth at any time, and we would be done for.
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So yeah, I agree. We need to be on Mars. We need to colonize Mars. We need to colonize the moon.
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We need to put space stations in space that people live on. All of that ra ra space stuff from the 60s and 70s.
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We really still need to do all that stuff.
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So I really admire this guy. I admire his drive. I admire his message. I admire all of that.
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What I don't admire about him, necessarily, or just in general, let's say just in general, is a cult of personality.
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Right now, this drive primarily centers around one man.
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Yes, there are others in the game. There are other organizations, other companies trying to get out of space and take advantage of all this.
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Most of them are very far behind and have gotten nothing like the enthusiasm and mind share of that space X has gotten.
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But all of that would go away if Elon Musk dropped dead of a heart attack tomorrow.
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Literally, it would crumble, right? While space X would still be around, it would not have the same drive.
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And you would see a quick erosion of its goals.
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So right now, we have a strong man who's leading the charge because that's apparently what we need to have.
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Right? Well, we had that once before with the space race and the strong man was called the moon.
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And once we got there, once we beat the moon, that was it.
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I don't like that. I don't like pinning our hopes all on either one mission or one man's vision.
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This needs to be many people's visions. This needs to be a collective effort.
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Well, it should be a collective effort of the human race, but certainly it should be a collective effort of quite a few organizations.
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Some of them governmental, probably most of them private companies.
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We need to take it as seriously as any endeavor in human history.
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Otherwise, it's going to wither away and it might be another 40 years, 50 years until somebody comes along with a good song and dance and gets us off the ground.
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I don't like that this man's a rock star of aerospace engineering and tech that people call him Tony Stark.
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I don't like that because that makes it all a show.
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And that means that if there's a problem with the showman, the show stops.
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Right? Historically, that's always been a bad thing.
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Now, he might have a nice, long, healthy life in which case he'll get an awful lot done.
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And as things stand right now, I absolutely hope that that's the case.
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I wish that man long life and great health and vigorous strength until his old age.
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And that will allow him to do what he wants to do because what he wants to do is what I want to see done.
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But man, oh man, I also hope that there's someone else who steps up, a woman, a man, or however they identify someone and then another someone.
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And then a hundred someone's because if we rely on one person to save us, you know what?
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Historically speaking, relying on saviors, that doesn't often get the average person very far.
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I don't believe that it's a good idea to expect SpaceX to save us, to save the human race, right?
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I mean, because when you're talking in terms of becoming a multi-planetary species in order to become immune to extinction level events,
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because if we're on the moon, the moon's a little close, but that's pretty safe, right?
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The moon's a little close though.
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You know, if a very large asteroid hit the Earth, the moon could suffer, right?
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But by and large, it's definitely doing okay.
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The moon itself is actually not so safe to live on because it doesn't have an atmosphere to protect it.
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All right, whatever. Mars isn't much better because its atmosphere is really, really thin.
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But if we're spread around, it would take something like a nova or supernova to wipe out the entire solar system.
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Or, of course, things like disease and war and all of the usual, they follow us around.
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But I don't think that we can rely on any one person, any one company, to save the human race.
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It seems like a recipe for disaster to me, sooner or later.
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And if we look to one company for all the answers, it's going to be one answer that they think is the best, right?
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And that's always been a bad idea for freedom, for expansion, for social evolution, technological evolution.
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That all these things are bad.
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So we need more companies.
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We need more private citizens involved.
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We need more governments to take it seriously.
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Because putting all of our hopes and dreams into one man's pocket, even a man I greatly admire,
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I think that's a bad idea.
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Anyway, that was just some thoughts I had today.
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And I thought I'd share them along.
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If you have any opinions on this, please go ahead and leave them in the comments for this show.
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Or better yet, do your own episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Give us your opinion on this subject or any subject.
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Anything you happen to be interested in because I guarantee you someone else is.
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You have opinions and we want to hear about it.
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Thanks for listening.
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Take care.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club.
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And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
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Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Otherwise, status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution, share a light 3.0 license.
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