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Elon Musk and China: Where's the Beef?

Billionaire Elon Musk is currently having serious issues with China!

By Justiss GoodePublished 2 years ago 5 min read
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Elon Musk and China: Where's the Beef?
Photo by SpaceX on Unsplash

Correct me if I'm wrong, but does it make sense to you, that a private citizen - any private citizen, can potentially cause this country to come that much closer to the brink of war?

Okay, maybe the situation might not be as extreme as all that. But you gotta admit, the fact that Elon Musk currently has beef with China, due to something happening in space, is actually a bit unsettling.

Before you decide to weigh in on this topic, allow me to share a few points about why I feel the way I do.

China and the U.S. are constantly in conflict

In case some readers are uninformed about certain regions of the world; China and the U.S. are definitely not on friendly terms. We stay in constant conflict with them, therefore the thought of an ordinary citizen being able to rock that boat even more is crazy to me.

The Elon Musk controversy is not about some political situation, pertaining to issues involving our government, or military, or anything like that.

This is about a regular citizen -when you put all his BILLIONS and intellect aside - causing situations in space, that present some serious, if not detrimental, consequences to our nation.

Are we to assume that anyone who can afford it, can engage in the type of unlimited, unrestricted, and ungoverned activities and experimentation they want to; in spite of potential consequences?

I'm sure Mr. Musk is supposed to abide by whatever government regulations are put in place for creative minds with his kind of money. But whatever those checks and balances might happen to be; can we really expect them to keep him, or anyone else with his kind of wealth in line?

It's no secret that money talks and bullshit walks. It always has, and it probably always will!

So it stands to reason, if there's something Elon Musk wants to do, or see come to pass; no amount of government regulations are going to prevent him from making that happen; not with all the money that he has to throw at the problem.

So let's consider what happened with Mr. Musk and China, and the whole Spacex debacle in 2021.

Where's the beef? It's right here!

Basically, here's what's going on with this situation. Calls for sanctions against Elon Musk's SpaceX program were reported online Wednesday (12/29/21), amidst strong suggestions that his Tesla electric carmaker company be boycotted.

Officials in Beijing have been putting pressure on prominent U.S. figures from the business community, including Elon Musk, who up until recently, was viewed favorably in China.

How the "beef" or controversy that Musk has managed to stir up first began, can be attributed to activities that took place not here on earth, but in space.

Beijing has alleged that the SpaceX satellites owned by Elon Musk, are a threat to the safety of China's space station, primarily due to two "close encounters" in 2021.

According to the document the U.N. received from Beijing, their Tiangong space station had to take evasive maneuvers on July 1 and Oct. 21, so as not to collide with satellites owned by Musk.

The controversy with China is about more than "close encounters"

Anyone with half a brain can recognize that so much more is at stake here, and that this is about more than just two close encounters.

The truth is, China and the U.S. are in something equivalent to a type of Cold War space race. They both want to claim credit for putting the first human on Mars, and also staking claim to the most strategic positions in space as well.

With high stakes like these; everything space-related comes under close scrutiny, on both sides. That means that whatever Elon Musk is doing in outer space, is viewed through the same type of lens as all other national security issues. Not just by Beijing, but by Washington.

True, he's a private citizen, and what he does with his wealth is his business, but to what to extent? Could it and should it be allowed to potentially create a safety issue for hundreds of thousands of other private citizens who also have rights?

Some readers may not like that question or the suggestion that Mr. Musk should be more limited in what he can and can't do with his billions. But even if I don't ask it here, some people are asking it somewhere else.

In fact, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian used this line of thought when he accused the U.N. of disregarding the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, a mechanism put in place to help assure 'responsible behavior in outer space,' among the nations involved. Zhao stated:

"The U.S. claims to be a strong advocate for the concept …"

Then he went on to add how the hypocritical actions of the U.S. actually:

"…posed a grave threat to the safety of astronauts."

Elon Musk and China no longer on the best of terms

Even though Elon Musk has been adored in China for years, it's safe to say that they're no longer on the best of terms.

While the country's prominent entrepreneurs may have praised him in the past as a creative visionary, we'll have to see if the love of his Tesla cars are enough to keep them loyal.

Tesla is one of the few foreign carmakers allowed to operate in a Shanghai factory solo. Typically, these businesses are required to find a Chinese partner to team up with.

Going forward, it remains to be seen, to what extent the SpaceX situation affects the relationship between Elon Musk and China.

The fact that other close encounters have also occurred in orbit between man-made objects doesn't help the situation any. Especially when SpaceX's Starlink has been blamed as being a major contributor to all the clutter.

The head of the Astronautics Research Group at the University of Southampton in Britain referred to some startling details, supplied by Space.com, when he credited Starlink for:

"…more than half of close encounters between spacecraft in orbit, with the proportion forecast to grow to as much as 90 percent as the company launches more satellites."

As it stands, regardless of what kind of rapport Elon Musk has with China, they still see him as an American citizen, and they view his SpaceX program as a threat.

According to Elon Musk's stated goal for SpaceX; the plan is:

"…to put more than 40,000 satellites into orbit."

If this is done ahead of China, I imagine they would still view it as a loss between them and the U.S., even though Musk is a private citizen.

So now; under the circumstances, is it any wonder that I get a little worried when I know that Elon Musk has beef with China?

Thanks for reading.

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About the Creator

Justiss Goode

Old crazy lady who loves to laugh and make others smile, but most of all, a prolific writer who lives to write! Nothing like a little bit of Justiss every day :-)

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