|
|
|
|
|
by TFYS
481 days ago
|
|
Being the most successful out of three or even a dozen doesn't make someone exceptional. Because so few people with interest in space have "only" a few hundred million, we can't really say if it's actually his talent that made it possible or simply the result of having access to resources that the vast majority of people could never dream of. The U.S. has a long history of aerospace innovation, from NASA to private contractors, and Musk was able to use this ecosystem. China doesn't have that. |
|
And the US doesn't have a long history of aerospace innovation. In 1962 Kennedy gave his 'to the Moon' speech, 7 years later in 1969 we'd go from having nothing to putting a man on the Moon. From 1969 (well 1972 in particular) to the birth of SpaceX (early 2000s) US space technology not only stagnated but regressed. This is why Boeing (who was a major part of the original space race) can't manage to even begin to replicate what we achieved in the 60s, in 7 years no less!
Incidentally this is also a big part of what motivated Elon to start SpaceX. He was looking at NASA's future plans for human spaceflight and they were basically nonexistent. So he wanted to launch a greenhouse to Mars and stream it growing, to inspire people and hopefully get things moving in the right direction again. NASA wasn't interested in any such things, the Russians wanted too much $$$, and so SpaceX was born.
[1] - https://www.weforum.org/stories/2024/04/space-economy-techno...