All Hail ET or Master of The Universe
A Great man in Any Term but is he a man ? or He – Man not Really from this Planet
The Richest man on the planet has companies that makes cars, gossip fake news, robots deep holes in the ground and holes in our brains and spaceships …
1.people have been making cars since 1886 even with batteries lol
2. algebra gossip and news has been around since the snake that talks yet we have to find X
3.china makes better robots and no one can really afford them yet
4.the london underground has been around for ages why dig up more earth ? its Boring and yes That is the Company name
5.Neural link Mind Control & Brain Damage has another term Madness and Politics and yes he is the First Trillionaire lol
and spaceships … he has not sent a spaceship to the moon this was done ages ago or was it ? Satellite Phones/Internet have long existed yet Starlink has not done any city links
Guess What CV this could be for ? An Alien or as Christians call them Demons
you dont need to be Einstein to Figure this out
Part 1 the 1 trillionaire musk is not musking

A skeptical or conspiratorial perspective.
Here is a breakdown of why this description directly targets him:
The Company and Product Matches
- Cars: Tesla (Electric Vehicles).
- Gossip/Fake News: X (formerly Twitter).
- Robots: Optimus (Tesla Bot).
- Deep holes in the ground: The Boring Company.
- Holes in our brains: Neuralink (brain-computer interface).
- Spaceships: SpaceX.
- Satellite Internet: Starlink.
Musk is not actually an innovator (“musking”), instead that all his technologies are either stolen, rebranded versions of old inventions, or potentially harmful (comparing Neuralink to mind control and Starlink to alien/demonic technology). and Then Some

Part 2
This all looks like Someone Who wants to Take over The World or Take us Out !
That particular “Elon Musk is an alien” theory is actually a massive, long-running joke that Musk himself constantly fuels.
At multiple major global events—most recently speaking to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink at the World Economic Forum in Davos, and previously at the Viva Tech conference in Paris—Musk has literally laughed and told interviewers, “I keep saying I’m an alien, but nobody believes me.” He also jokes that his Cybertruck and EV developments will continue even if he “goes back to my home planet.”
Looking closely at his actual stated mission, his “takeover” or “take away” plans break down into two core areas:
1. “Take Us Away from Earth” (The Mars Multi-Planetary Goal)
If anyone is trying to take humans off the planet, it is Musk, but through SpaceX. His public philosophy revolves around the concept of The Great Filter—the scientific theory that advanced civilizations eventually go extinct due to planetary disasters or self-destruction. Musk views establishing a self-sustaining city on Mars not as an alien invasion, but as a backup drive or “insurance policy for humanity’s future” to ensure human consciousness isn’t wiped out.
2. “Taking Over Earth” (The Satellites and AI Grid)
While he might not be a literal extraterrestrial, critics argue his companies are building an Earth-spanning infrastructure that mimics a sci-fi takeover:
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- The Starlink Grid: With thousands of satellites now in Low Earth Orbit, Starlink provides an inescapable global internet mesh. Musk joked that if real aliens were visiting Earth, he would know first because his satellites haven’t bumped into any UFOs yet.
- The xAI and SpaceX Merger: His tech reach became even more massive following the high-profile merger of his artificial intelligence startup xAI with SpaceX, right before SpaceX’s record-breaking Nasdaq IPO. This combined physical rocketry with digital super-intelligence, making him the world’s first trillionaire and giving him unprecedented control over global data.
Ultimately, the text you shared taps into a very real public fascination. Because his technologies are so disruptive and global, it is easy to see why people look at his massive satellite grid, brain chips, and Mars rockets and jokingly—or seriously—wonder if he’s operating on an entirely different planetary playbook.
Part 3 Find X
x is everything in Musks World or planet
1. Historical Fact-Checking
The claims in the text use historical truths to downplay modern technological achievements.
- Electric Cars since 1886: This is historically accurate. The first practical electric vehicles (EVs) were built in the 1880s (William Morrison built a notable one in the US around 1890). By 1900, EVs accounted for about a third of all vehicles on US roads. Musk did not invent the electric car; Tesla popularized high-performance lithium-ion EVs at a global commercial scale.
- Tunnels and the London Underground: This is accurate. The London Underground opened in 1863 as the world’s first subterranean railway. The critic argues that tunneling is archaic. The Boring Company’s stated goal is not the concept of tunneling itself, but reducing costs and increasing digging speed through smaller tunnel diameters and automated boring machines.
- Satellites and Starlink: This is partially accurate. Communication satellites have existed since the mid-20th century (e.g., Telstar in 1962), and satellite phones (Iridium) have existed since the 1990s. However, Starlink’s framework is fundamentally different. Instead of a few massive satellites in high geostationary orbit (which cause high latency), Starlink uses a mega-constellation of thousands of small satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) to deliver low-latency broadband. [2, 3, 4]
- The Moon vs. Spaceships: This is accurate. Apollo 11 landed on the moon in 1969. SpaceX has not sent a human to the moon. SpaceX has primarily focused on lowering the cost of spaceflight via reusable booster rockets (Falcon 9) and launching cargo/crew to the International Space Station (ISS), though its Starship vehicle is contracted by NASA for future lunar landings. [5]
2. Financial Breakdown & Trillionaire Status
The text jokingly refers to Musk as the “First Trillionaire”. [6]
- The Trillionaire Milestone: Elon Musk officially became the world’s first US dollar trillionaire. [6, 7]
- The Catalyst: His wealth officially crossed the 13-figure threshold following the historic initial public offering (IPO) of SpaceX on the Nasdaq. [8, 9]
- Current Net Worth Valuation: As of mid-June 2026, Musk’s net worth fluctuates between $1.1 trillion and US$1.3 trillion, depending on daily stock movements. [6, 10, 11]
- Paper Wealth Reality: This money is not liquid cash sitting in a bank account. It is almost entirely tied up in equity:
- SpaceX/xAI: His 42% stake and options in the newly public aerospace giant make up the largest portion of his wealth (valued over $760–$800+ billion).
- Tesla: His equity and restored compensation options make up the remainder of his fortune. [1, 7, 9, 12, 13]
3. Rhetorical Analysis & Themes
The text uses specific persuasive techniques to construct its argument:
- Diminutio (Downplaying Achievement): The author frames complex aerospace, neurological, and automotive engineering fields as simple or repackaged concepts (“digging deep holes,” “making cars… even with batteries”).
- Slippery Slope & Alarmism: The critique pivots from engineering projects to existential threats. Neuralink (a medical brain-computer interface) is linguistically re-branded as “Mind Control,” “Brain Damage,” “Madness,” and “Politics.”
- Esoteric and Religious Framing: The text concludes by moving away from materialist criticism into theological territory. It utilizes a classic counter-cultural or technophobic trope: framing hyper-advanced, invisible, or space-bound technology (like global satellite internet) as “Alien” or “Demonic.” This serves to appeal to religious or supernatural frameworks to explain massive shifts in global infrastructure.
