←back to thread

1106 points sama | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.213s | source
Show context
djcooley ◴[] No.12509856[source]
I have all the respect in the world for what Mr. Musk has accomplished, but it has come at an amazing cost to the people around him.

He is worshiped from afar but reviled by many the closer you get to his inner circle. Go read "Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future."

The question I always ask myself with the people who move mountains is what cost did that progress come at? What would someone's spouse, kids, friends, etc. say about the person?

replies(12): >>12509898 #>>12509906 #>>12509914 #>>12510037 #>>12510275 #>>12510352 #>>12510363 #>>12510402 #>>12510631 #>>12510796 #>>12510876 #>>12511193 #
_RPM ◴[] No.12509898[source]
People that worship another person generally aren't well informed. For example, people look at Elon Musk like he's a pop culture icon -- I see people talking about him on my news feed all the time, yet these people aren't even technical. It's just a way for someone to identify to some type of group. Oh look what Elon's doing, he's so great. My reaction is, why are you sharing press articles about this person? Does it make you feel better about yourself?
replies(5): >>12509988 #>>12510073 #>>12510809 #>>12510879 #>>12510918 #
1. luckydata ◴[] No.12510918[source]
People share in an effort to communicate to the world something about themselves. The feel better part will come from their friends and family knowing about what makes them tick and strangers the might be able to recognize a kindred spirit and in turn extend their network of people they enjoy hanging out with.

let me know if you need me to break down other basic human instincts for you :-)