.@Starcloud_ CEO @PhilipJohnston: "Buy SpaceX stock."
"It's like owning the railroads."
" The SpaceX IPO is going to be viewed historically as the most undervalued IPO of all time."
"They will tear through $10 trillion certainly within the next couple of years, and then have almost unlimited TAM for what they're building."
"I'm not like regulated by anybody. So I'm going to tell people, 'Just buy SpaceX stock.' I think it's a great stock to buy."
"They own what will be by far the most cost-effective launch vehicle, and that opens up every industry in space that will be possible beyond that: asteroid mining, lunar resource mining, all of the comms businesses that are going to be built. Everything else is going to have to go through SpaceX."
"It's like owning the railroads. Lots of businesses will be built on top of it, like our business will be built on top of it."
"The railroads are a great business to own."
@elonmusk
To the Americans:
I've travelled all over the world. I've familiarized myself with many places, and met many people. And I'm a Canadian, although I’m privileged to reside once again in the States.
And here's something I've noticed, and it’s a key element of America's continuing greatness:
You bloody Americans value success, and you believe in its existence.
This is something that doesn't really happen anywhere else in the world. Even in other free democracies—the United Kingdom; Finland, Sweden, and Norway; Australia, New Zealand and Canada; Germany, France, and the Netherlands (great countries all)—a counterproductive cynicism too often reigns.
Success is equated with exploitation.
Ambition is looked upon with contempt.
This happens sometimes in the United States too—particularly among the miserable progressives, who confuse their resentment, ingratitude and unearned skepticism with wisdom.
But in your great country, by and large, striving is admired and success celebrated.
This means that more people strive and succeed in the US than anywhere else. And it's increasingly obvious. You remain stunningly more innovative and productive than any people anywhere else on the planet.
And so I say, as all should who are fortunate enough to live in the western world, let alone America:
Thank God for the United States.
Thank God for the wisdom of its founders.
Thank God for its faith in the free market and in the natural rights of man.
Happy birthday, you damn Yankees and Southerners.
Long may your admirable country dominate the world.
Long may your freedom and hope provide an example to those suffering everywhere at the hands of their malevolent states.
May your two and a half centuries of unparallelled success be just the beginning.
Your country is the light of the world, and the city on the hill.
Thank God for the USA.
Happy 250th.
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
@Tdmoney26 By that logic every far‑left march on campus means admin secretly agrees with them too. Sometimes it’s just ‘this is a free country,’ not ‘we co‑signed the ideology’?
This is the corner of the right that makes being a conservative look indefensible. Nothing ‘patriotic’ about masked white supremacists marching under Confederate flags and talking about ‘Aryan victory.’
A group of hundreds of masked white supremacists marched in D.C. today carrying American and Confederate flags while chanting, “Reclaim America!”
A streamer with the group described it as a “total Aryan victory.”
Will Trump condemn this display of hate in our nation’s capital on July 4th?
America has gone from muskets and marching drums to drones and microchips in 250 years.
America is the greatest country and will keep being great. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Cheers to freedom and the American dream that if you work hard and have a little luck you can accomplish whatever you want 👊🏽🔥💪🏽
After sitting here watching NBA free agency this year and overall NBA movement over the past 2 years somebody has to say it....
The new CBA was sold as parity, but the first and second apron are starting to function like a hard cap on player value, team continuity, and player movement.
Teams are no longer making purely basketball decisions. They’re making fear-based apron decisions. That means good players get squeezed, homegrown cores get broken up, fan-favorite teams lose their identity, and the overall product loses some of the nostalgia and continuity that made people fall in love with the NBA in the first place.
This isn’t about players not understanding business. It’s the opposite. We understand that the NBA is a business. That’s why the @TheNBPA has to operate with elite business acumen, elite negotiating strategy, and real foresight.
The owners and the league walk into these meetings with killers that continue to run circles around us time and time again with elite lawyers, economists, cap experts, media strategists, and long term business operators. Players deserve a PA that is just as sharp, just as prepared, and just as aggressive about protecting our upside.
Too often, it feels like players are informed after the fact instead of being truly educated and empowered before decisions are made. That cannot continue.
The next CBA is a do or die moment for us as players. It's only going to get worse for us. We need transparency, accountability, and a serious re evaluation of who is representing us and how they are representing us.
This is not anti parity. This is pro player, fan, and product. The league is strongest when players are valued properly, great teams can stay together, and the people representing us are operating at the same level as the people sitting across the table.
From the court to quantum. 👀
NBA Champion @kylekuzma visited the IBM Research THINK Lab to meet with experts @liv_lanes and Scott Crowder for a firsthand look at IBM's decades of leadership in quantum computing and the breakthroughs shaping its future.
Thanks for stopping by, Kyle!
Awesome time hanging with one of my favorite companies @LunarOutpostInc building some special things for space robotics and in space infrastructure… oh and Justin Cyrus what a guy he is! What a sick rover! 🧑🏽🚀🌕