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How US Taxpayers Helped Elon Musk Become the Richest Man on Earth | Common Dreams

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  • I think we need to mentally compartmentalize Elon Musk, the rich dingbat, from the output of his companies.

    Tesla single-handedly brought the electric car to the American market in a sustainable way, where every US and Japanese car maker was in a pause state waiting for somebody else to take the first move (although, credit to Nissan for the Leaf, but I think that by itself the Leaf wasn't going to open the floodgates).

    For all the goofiness around SpaceX, I think they've proven that they are the right model for developing orbital boost systems. Other major players are trying to be more like SpaceX.

    Should the US have effectively subsidized these efforts? Yeah, we should have. Arguably Tesla and SpaceX were the only serious players in these markets with the chutzpah to be successful, after a lot of false starts by others (incl. bigger companies in the same markets).

    It's a shame that they enabled and enriched a giant dingbat, but in the end, Tesla and SpaceX have done things that nobody else could.

    So by all means, tax him. And point out how Tesla and SpaceX depended on gov't subsidies and tax rebates. But let's also keep focus on the fact that electric car success and a more competitive space program are good things that were, and are, worth taxpayer involvement.

    Also, to go back to the subject of the article. We don't really need a wealth tax. We don't need a corporate tax (which is just the political cowards tax).

    We need to stop giving capital gains a free ride. Tax income when it is realized, consistently. Investment income should the same tax -- or just very slightly less -- as wage income. 15% tax on investment returns is laughably low.

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