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Most Controversial Elon Musk Interview

The New York Times Summit 2023

Highlights!:   Go yourself! Is that clear? You are about to watch the most controversial interview that Elon Musk has ever given. He talked about all of his companies, including Tesla, and this one is a must-watch for all Tesla stock investors, as well as all Elon Musk followers.

Announcer: Please welcome Andrew Ross Sorkin. Please, please, and his guests, CEO of Tesla, CEO of SpaceX, chief engineer and CTO of X, Elon Musk.

Interviewer: Good evening, everybody. Thank you so much for being with us throughout the day, and I couldn’t be more pleased to sit with Elon Musk for our final interview of this remarkable time we’ve all had together. He doesn’t need much of an introduction, but I want to say a couple of things. He’s the richest person in the world. He may well be the most concise, how most consequential individual in the world right now. He runs the most innovative companies in the world—Tesla, SpaceX, Starlink (which is part of that), Neuralink, The Boring Company, and his X.A.I. And he’s disrupted each of these lanes. He’s moved at breakneck speeds, but he’s facing a storm of controversy in the process. He joins us today following a visit, as you all know so well, we discussed earlier on Monday to Israel where he met with the Prime Minister there and the President of Israel, and we’re going to talk about everything. My hope is that we can talk about how he thinks about his influence, how he thinks about his power, how he thinks about all of it. And we’re going to talk about innovation and everything else.

Interviewer: I want to say just two other things real quick. So we met each other for the first time 16 years ago.

Elon: Yes, a long time, and all the kids were three

Interviewer: When we first met, I think you’re just about to deliver your first Roadster. I don’t think you had yet. Larry Page was still waiting.

Elon: Yeah, it’s to get, like, in 2007, 2008

Interviewer: I remember going back to The Newsroom and saying I think I just met the next Steve Jobs, I’m going to hold to that, but a lot has happened between when I first met you and now.  You came to DealBook and sat on this stage, and we’re thrilled to have you back, but there’s been so much that happened between now and then, and there’s been so much that’s happened in the past week, week and a half, and a lot of folks—and I want to tell you this —a lot of folks called me up and said, “You really going to host Elon Musk here? Can you believe what he just said on Twitter on X on?” Should you platform him? That’s what they said. Yeah, did you platform him? I said that I think it’s our role. And I know you have issues with journalists as a platform, and I know you have an issue with journalists oftentimes, but I said it’s our role to have conversations and to inquire and to, and sometimes even interrogate ideas, and that’s what I’m hoping. We can do that.

Interviewer: So I want to start just so we can begin this conversation and just level, just and conversation. This begin. Can we, so just start to—I want level, said take us through everything that happened if you could. Over the past week and a half – You send out a post or an X or a tweet, otherwise..

Elon: whatever. Yeah, as I’m trying to, like, when things were just 140 characters that made sense, comma tweet because, like, a bunch of little birds chirping. But when, you know, point which you can put, like, three-hour videos on, it’s very long tweet. So here we are. This is more descriptive, I think.

Interviewer: And at some point, I don’t know where you were. But you write in responding to another tweet. This is the actual truth, and it set off a firestorm of criticism all the way to the White House, And then you make this trip to Israel. You have advertisers who left the platform, people calling.

Elon: Well, the trip to Israel is independent of it wasn’t something like an apology tour. I want to be clear. That was—

Interviewer: well, let’s talk about that. So just, but just take this back. Back to the moment at which you write that

Elon: Trip to Israel is independent of, was like in response to that at all.

Interviewer: Well, let’s do it. We’ll do is really just a moment.

Elon: I have no problem being hated, hated, hated, by the way. hate away.

Interviewer: Well, but you know what, let’s go straight to that then for a second, because there is an idea, and you could say that to..

Elon: a real weakness to be liked, I do not have that.

Interviewer: Let me ask you this. Then. There’s a difference you’re saying I don’t care if anyone likes me or they hate me, but given your power and given what you have amassed and your the importance you have. I would think you want to be trusted. I would think maybe you don’t need to be liked or hate it but trusted matters if X is going to become a financial platform where people going to put their money where people where the government’s going to give you money for four Rockets where people are going to get into the cars. They need to ultimately decide that you are they don’t have to say that they love you, but that you are ultimately a decent and good human being.

Elon: Yes. being. human good and decent a ultimately you are that but Yes. I am and I think I am. But I’m certainly not going to, but some sort of tap dance to prove to people that I am. So as for trust, I mean, I think write that down in a few ways if you want your, if you want satellites into orbit reliably, SpaceX will do 80% of all master orbit this year. China will be 12 percent. The rest of the world will do eight that includes Boeing Lockheed and everyone else. So the track record of the rocket is the best by far of anything you could you could hey. My guts next you could not trust me. It is relevant the rocket track record speaks for itself with respect to Tesla. We make the best cars, whether you hate your life, hate me, like me, or indifferent. Do you want the best car or do you not want the best car? So I will certainly not pander and Johnson like the only reason I’m here is that you are a friend. Like what was my speaking fee?

Interviewer: I’m Andrew, But yeah,

Elon: Sorry.

Interview: It’s okay. Second of all, we’ve known each other for a very long time…

Elon: I’m trying to illustrate us that sometimes I say the wrong thing.

Interviewer: I think they’re a lot of people who are tired, but let me go back…

Elon: You should hear the sketches that SNL wouldn’t post by the way, those were really good.

Interviewer: and I would say unfortunately or fortunately or unfortunately whatever friendship we have not great. We don’t talk to each other that much. That’s true.

Elon: Where am I? I am here because your a friend or because I’m paid or need any validation or anything, or is that It it we’ve been friends for 16 years It and I promise I would be here, and thats why I’m here.

Interviewer: Well, I appreciate you being here for any other reason. But let me ask you this, then. Let’s go at it. Just tell me what happened. You write this tweet that says that this is the actual truth. People read that tweet..

Elon: yes,

Interviewer: ..and they say, “Elon Musk is an anti-Semite.” He is riling up this base. You’re hearing it from, as I said, the White House. You’re hearing it from Jewish groups all over. I think Jonathan Greenblat from the ADL is here. There’s lots of people who say this. And, by the way, it’s not just that..

Elon Musk: Did you read the whole thing.

Interviewer: I did, and that’s what I want to ask.

Elon: and the responses,

Interviewer: excuse me.

Elon: I said more.

Interviewer: more responses?

Elon: Yeah, I said more than what you just read.

Interviewer: Yes, there was absolutely more, yes. But I’ll tell you the thing that struck me. It wasn’t, um, and I’m an American Jew. It wasn’t just the people who had that view. It was actually people who really are anti-Semites who said, “Oh my goodness, go, go Elon. This is fabulous.” And that actually was the thing that really, uh, really set me back. And I said to myself, “What’s going on here?” And I want to know how you felt about that in that moment when you saw all of this happening, yeah.

Elon: Um, well, first of all, I did clarify, almost immediately what I meant. I would say that that was, you know, if I could go back and say I should, in retrospect, not have replied to that particular person, and I should have written in greater length as to what I meant. Um, I did subsequently see, uh, in replies, uh, but those clarifications were ignored by the media. Um, and essentially, I handed a loaded gun to those who hate me, um, and arguably to those who are anti-Semitic, uh, and for that, I’m quite sorry. That was not my intention. So I did, you know, post on my primary timeline to be absolutely clear that I’m not anti-Semitic, um, and that I, in fact, if anything, I am philosemitic; and the trip to Israel was planned before any of that happened. Uh, it was neither here nor there. Do you see, see this thing, Do you know what it is?

Interviewer: I do because I actually followed your entire trip to Israel. Why don’t you tell everybody?

Elon: This says, “Bring them home,” the hostages. It was given to me by the parents of one of the hostages, and I said I would wear it as long as there was a hostage store remaining. And I have.

Interviewer: Um, what was that trip like? And obviously, you know, that there’s a public perception that, and you’re clarifying this now, um, but there’s a public perception that that was part of an apology tour, if you will. That this had been said online. There was all of the criticism. There were advertisers leaving. We talked to Bob Iger…

Elon: ok stop. don’t advertise.

Interviewer: You don’t want them to advertise?

Elon: No.

Interviewer: What do you mean,

Elon: if somebody’s going to try to blackmail me with advertising, blackmail me with money? Go f yourself. go f yourself. Is that clear? I hope it is. Hey, Bob if he’s here in the audience.

Interviewer: Well, well, let me ask you then.

Elon Musk: That’s how I feel. Don’t advertise.

Interviewer: How do you think then about the economics of X? If part of the underlying model, at least today, and maybe it needs to shift, maybe the answer is it needs to shift away from advertising. If you believe that this is the one part of your business where you will be beholden to those who have this view. What do you do?

Elon Musk: GFY!

Interviewer: I understand that, but there’s a reality too, right? Noan Lind Yaro is right here, and she’s got to sell advertising,

Elon: Absolutely. So, what this advertising boycott is going to do, It’s going to kill the company; and the whole world will know that those advertisers killed the company, and we will document it in great detail.

Interviewer: But there are those advertisers, I imagine, are going to say, they’re going to say we didn’t kill the company.

Elon Musk: Oh yeah, tell it to Earth.

Interviewer: But they’re going to say that they’re going to say, Elon, that you killed the company because you said these things and that they were inappropriate things and they didn’t feel comfortable on the platform, right? That’s what they’re going to say.

Elon Musk: And let’s see how Earth responds to that..  We’ll both make our cases, right? And we’ll see what the outcome is.

Interviewer: What are the economics of that for you? I mean, you have enormous resources, so you can actually keep this company going for a very long time. Would you keep it going for a long time if there was no advertising?

Elon Musk: I mean, if the company fails because of an advertised boycott, it will fail because of an advertised boycott, and that will be what bankrupted the company. And that’s what everybody on Earth will know.  It’ll be gone, and it’ll be gone because of an advertised boycott.

Interviewer: But, but you recognize that some of those people are going to say that they didn’t feel comfortable on the platform. And I, I wonder, I just wonder and ask you and think about that for a second.

Elon Musk: Tell it to the judge.

Interviewer: But the judge is going to be the ..

Elon: The Judge is the public

Interview: and you think the public is going to say that Disney is making a mistake?

Elon Musk: Yes

Interview: and they’re going to boycott Disney.

Elon Musk: They already are.

Interview: Well, there, there are some that are for, for lots of different reasons, but you think that this is going to, that you have the, this goes to actually the interesting of power and leverage.

Elon Musk: Let the chips fall where they may.

Interviewer: Can I ask why that is the approach, and I ask it because you’ve been approach well, you’ve been very particular about the, I mean the approach to Tesla, uh, when you think about the engineering involved in that, the approach to SpaceX, the approach to um, some of the stuff you’re doing with, with AI has been very specific, right? There’s not a let, let the chips fall where they may approach to those businesses. I don’t think.

Elon: No, we focus on making the best products, and Tesla has gotten to where it’s gotten with no advertising at all.

Interviewer: I understand that.

Elon: Tesla currently sells twice as much, uh, in terms of electric vehicles as the rest of electric car makers in the United States combined. Tesla has done more to help the environment than, uh, all other companies combined, would be fair to say therefore, as a leader of the company, I’ve done more for the environment than any single human on earth.

Interviewer: How do you feel about that?

Interviewer: I’m asking you personally, how you feel about that, because this goes—we were talking about power and influence and..

Elon: I’m saying what I care about is the reality of goodness, not the perception of it. And what I see all over the place is people who care about looking good while doing evil. f them, okay.

Interviewer: Let me ask you this because I think part of this, by the way, there’s some people who said, ‘Look, owning X to begin with has just created problems.’ That you’ve created so many amazing things that are changing our world. And I know you want to make X this fabulous Town Square, free speech platform. But that unto itself, that has created such a distraction of all of these things. This is the conversation we’re having. We’re not focusing, or not talking at least yet, and we will on Tesla. You have Cybertruck deliveries tomorrow and everything else that you’re doing, but..

Elon: It will be the biggest product launch of anything by far on Earth this year.

Interviewer: Is there any part of you, though, that just says, you know what, I just shouldn’t have done this or maybe I should sell it or give it away or do something else with the X piece of it? given the propensity for some of the things that you do and say on that platform to create these issues.

Elon: yeah. Of all the posts I’ve done on the platform, I think there might be 30,000 or something like that, right? Once in a while, I will say something foolish. And I have, and I would certainly put that comment, um, you said the actual truth, uh, among perhaps one of the most foolish, if not the most foolish thing I’ve ever done on the platform. Um, and I did do my best to clarify, afterwards that, uh, you know, I, I certainly do not mean anything anti-Semitic in that. Um, the nature of the criticism was simply that, um, the Jewish people have been persecuted for thousands of years. There is a natural affinity, therefore, for persecuted groups. Um, this has led to the funding of organizations that essentially promote any persecuted group or any group with the perception of persecution. This includes radical Islamic groups. Everyone here has seen the massive demonstrations for Hamas in every major city in the West. That should be jarring. Well, a number of those organizations received funding from prominent people in the Jewish community. They didn’t expect that to happen, but if you generically, without condition, if you fund persecuted groups in general, some of those persecuted groups, unfortunately, want your annihilation. And what I meant by that, when I subsequently clarified it, is that it’s unwise to fund organizations that support groups that want your annihilation. Is this coming across clearly?

Elon Musk: Let’s say you fund a group and that group supports a mass who wants you to die. Perhaps you should not fund them, right?

Interviewer: You, you do appreciate that when you wade into these very delicate waters at these very delicate times, that it can create a real, I mean, as it created headlines for the past two weeks and economic impact. I’m just so curious, what goes on in your brain when you see all this happening? Are you sitting there going, ‘Oh my God, I stepped in it, I wish I didn’t do that?’ Are you saying, ‘Screw them, I hate these people, why are they after me?’

Elon: All of that, yeah, all of that. I mean, look, I’m sorry for that tweet or post. It was foolish of me. Of the 30,000, it might be literally the worst and dumbest to post that I’ve ever done. Um, and I tried to my best to clarify six ways of Sunday. Um, but you know, at least, uh, I think over time, it will be obvious that, in fact, far from being, uh, anti-Semitic, I’m in fact philo-Semitic. Um, and my, all the evidence, uh, in my track record would support that.

Interviewer: There are people who say crazy things on, on X, as you know. maybe you think they’re crazy, maybe they’re not.

Elon: The aspiration for X is to be the global town square. Now, if you were to walk down to, let’s say, Times Square, do you occasionally hear people saying crazy things? Things..

Interviewer: yes, But they don’t have the megaphone, right? And that’s the conundrum. They can only say it to the 50 or 100 people that are sitting, standing there in Times Square.

Elon: look, the joke I used to make about old Twitter was it was like giving everyone a megaphone. I’m aware that things can get promoted that are negative beyond the sort of circle of somebody simply screaming crazy things into Times Square, which happens all the time. Um, you know, so, so, the, it’s actually, it’s pretty rare for something, um, frankly that is, uh, hateful to be promoted. It’s not that it never happens. Um, but it’s, it’s fairly rare. Um, I mean, I would encourage people to look at, for those that use the system, when you look at the feed that you receive, how often is it hateful? And over time, has it gotten more or less hateful? And I would say that if you look at the X platform today versus a year ago, I think it is actually much better. I mean, what is your personal experience?

Interviewer: I use the platform, uh, religiously. I, I admit to being an addict. And I, I, for you, and I will, I will say now, the problem is because I’m a journalist, I go looking for stuff. and because I, and I, I also think the algorithm for me personally, because I’m looking for stuff also, is feeding me other things.

Elon: Well, this, this is actually a challenge in that, like, sometimes people will say, like, ‘Why is it showing me, you know, posts from this person that I hate?’ And then we were like, ‘Well, did you interact a lot with this person that you hate?’ ‘Well, yes.’ ‘Well, therefore, it thinks that you want to interact more with this person that you hate.’ That’s like a reasonable

Interviewer: Let me ask you this. When you tweet, yeah? Do you ever, or post, let’s say, post, when you post,

Elon: listen, I’m open if anyone can come up with a better word, uh, that would be great.

Interviewer: When you post, though, are you trying to rile up either a base or an audience? Do you, do you recognize the power you have in that? And also, by the way, not just rile up one versus the side of it, but also rile down, which is to say, as I said, there are people who are demonstrably anti-Semitic on the site, who I get Jew boy things and all sorts of things that come my way.  Do you ever think to yourself, you know what, I’m going to go online and I’m going to say, these people, I condemn these people that are on my site saying these things..

Elon: ‘Yeah, I said, I, I literally, I literally posted, I condemn anti-Semitism in all its forms.’ Like, that is a literal, I believe, literal post that I made. listen, if I can get out the thesaurus, if you compose it I’ll post it.

Interviewer: Okay, let me ask you this. Um, you, you were on a podcast, uh, about a month ago, and you said something that struck me. Um, and it struck me as accurate. Came out of your mouth, so hopefully it is, but I’m hoping we go deep on this. you said, ‘My, you said, my mind is a storm. I don’t think most people would want to be me. They may think they want to be me, but they don’t know, they don’t understand.’ What did you mean by that? what, your mind being a storm? And I, I think it, I mean, I have known you for quite, quite some time. I think it is a bit of a storm,

Elon: yes. Um, yeah, I mean, I, as much as a weather metaphor makes sense, um, my mind often feels like a, like a, like a very wild storm. Um, I mean, I have, I have a fountain of ideas. I mean, I have more ideas than I can possibly execute. Um, so I have no shortage of ideas. Innovation is not the problem; execution is the problem. I’ve got a million ideas. I mean, I’ve got an entire design for an electric supersonic vertical takeoff jet. But I mean, I just, if I, I just can’t do that, as well. I’ve had that for 10 years. Um, um, I, there are a million things. Um,

Interviewer: Is your storm a happy storm?

Elon: No, it’s not a happy storm, no.

Interviewer: Tell us about that, ’cause I, I think that, that actually, when people try to really understand you, I think that there’s a lot of this comes from some other place. And I, I want to talk about that. What do you think that is?

Elon: We need, like, a psychiatrist couch here or something. Um, I, you know, I, I think to some degree, I was born this way, but, and then I was amplified by a difficult childhood, frankly. Um, so, uh, but I can remember even in happy moments when, as a kid, that there’s just, it just feels like there’s just a, a rage of forces in my mind constantly. Um, now this, you know, productively manifests itself in technology and building things. Uh, for the most part, so, and I think on balance, the output has been very productive. Um, I think the results, as we, you know, discussed earlier with SpaceX, Tesla, PayPal, which is, you know, still going today, um, the first internet company that I started, in fact, the first internet company I started of two was, um, uh, funded by New York Times Company, Hearst, Night Rder, and, uh, we wrote some of the software for the, the New York Times website. Um, and we helped bring online several hundred newspapers that previously were only in print. Um, now this is in the ’90s, which at this point is, like, I’m like a grandpa PL, basically. Um, you know, the ’90s and internet feels like a pre-Cambrian era when there were only sponges. Um, so, um, anyway, so, you know, I feel like a lot of productive things have been done. And you can also look at Tesla as being so many companies in one. Like, our supercharging network is, if the Tesla supercharging network were its own company, it would be a Fortune 500 company by itself, just the supercharging system. Um, we also make the cells, we build the power electronics and the powertrain from scratch. Um, we have the most innovative structural design, the largest castings ever used. Um, we have the best manufacturing technology at Tesla, better manufacturing technology than companies that have been doing it for 100 years. So, so, these demons of the mind, you know, are for the most part, harnessed to productive ends. that doesn’t mean that once in a while they, you know, go wrong.

Interviewer: But, and this is a question I think a lot of people, you know, are always trying to figure out about not just you, but sometimes themselves, meaning what is driving all this? You’re doing all of these things. Do you think that it’s, do you think that you would be as successful, whatever success is, if it wasn’t being driven by some, I think that there’s something you’re trying to prove either to yourself or to somebody. I don’t know, we’re all trying to prove s May, I’m trying to prove it to my mother, I don’t know.

Elon: No, if I were to describe my philosophy as a philosophy of curiosity, um, I mean, I, I did have this existential crisis when I was around 12, about what’s the meaning of life? Isn’t it all pointless? Why not just commit suicide? Why exist? Um, I read the religious texts, um, I read the philosophy books, um, that, well, especially the German philosophy books, made me quite depressed, frankly. One should not read Schopenhauer as a teenager. Um, but then I read Douglas Adams’ Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, which is a book on philosophy in the form of humor. And the point that Adams was making there was that, uh, we don’t actually know what questions to ask. Um, that’s why he said that, you know, the answer is 42. Like, basically, Earth’s a giant computer, and it came up with the answer 42. But then to actually figure out what the question is that’s the actual hard part um

.. I think this is generally true, also in physics, at the point at which you can properly frame the question, the answer is actually the easy part. So, when my motivation then was that, well, my life is finite, really a flash in the pan on a galactic time scale. But if we can expand the scope and scale of consciousness, then we are better able to figure out what questions to ask about the answer that is the universe. Maybe we can find out the meaning of life or even what the right question to ask is.

.. You know, where did we come from? Where are we going? Where are the aliens? Are there aliens? And these questions, you know, and is there new physics to discover? Because there seem to be some real questions about dark matter and dark energy.

.. So, the purpose of SpaceX is to extend life beyond Earth on a sustained basis so that we can at least pass one of the firmest great filters, which is that of being a single-planet civilization. If we are a single-planet civilization, then we are simply waiting around for some extinction event, whether that is man-made or natural. But if you’re a single-planet civilization, eventually, something will happen to that planet, and you will die. If you’re a multi-planet civilization, you will live much longer. Also, a multi-planet civilization is the natural stepping stone to being a multi-stellar civilization and being out there among the stars.

.. Now, this, I think, has two—this is not simply a defensive motivation, but it is also one that gives meaning, a man’s search for meaning. Let me finish this philosophy point, even though it may seem rather esoteric. It may resonate with a few people. We must get past this firmest filter of being a great filter of being a single-planet civilization. If we do that, we are more likely to understand the nature of the universe and what questions to ask.

.. If you’re a believer in the philosophy of curiosity, then I think you should support this ambition. But it’s more than that. Being a multi-plan species is more than simply life insurance for life collectively. That’s a defensive reason. But I think also that life has to be more than simply solving one sad problem after another. There have to be reasons where you wake up in the morning and you’re happy to be alive. There have to be reasons that you say, ‘Why are you excited about the future?’ Like, what gives you hope? And if you aren’t sure, ask your kids.

.. I think the idea of us being a spacefaring civilization and being out there among the stars is incredibly inspiring and exciting. Something to look forward to, and there needs to be such things in the world.

Interviewer: A question about confidence. We were having a conversation here earlier, but people, um, and where your people get their confidence from. Some people have great insecurity, other people, uh, have great confidence, and I was thinking about you because you have a very interesting history where people have told you over and over again that you’re wrong.

Elon: Well, sometimes they’re right,

Interviewer: well, sometimes they are. But I would say that when it comes to Tesla, when it came to SpaceX, people told you that you were crazy, you were out of your mind, this was never going to happen, this was never going to work.  And so, as I ask you this, though, is now when people say you’re wrong, this isn’t right, do you look at that and say, you know what, that’s like a red flag for me because you know, I’ve been told so often that I’m wrong that I know that I, and I know I’m right because I’ve had that experience? Or are there people in your life when they say, you know what Elon, this is not right, do you know what I’m saying?

Elon: Um, I mean, I think what you’re trying to say is that, uh, do I, at this point, think because, uh, I’ve been right so many times when others have said I’m wrong that now I fast believe I’m right when in fact I’m wrong?

Interviewer: You do very well, what do you think?

Elon: No, I’m right!   So, uh, yeah, no, look, here’s the thing. physics is unforgiving, So, I mean, I have, you know, these various little sayings I’ve come up with, uh, that physics is the law and everything else is a recommendation, in the sense that, uh, you can break any law made by humans, but try breaking a law made by physics, that’s much more difficult.  So if you are wrong and persist in being wrong, the rockets will blow up and the cars will fail. So this is not we’re not trying to figure out what flavor of ice cream is the best flavor of ice cream. Like if there’s a thousand things that can happen on a rocket flight and only one of them gets the rocket to orbit and, and so being wrong results in failure, uh, when dealing with physical objects.

Interviewer: but that’s the interesting part. So now you’ve built these great companies that physically, the physics of them are enormously successful, so successful arguably that you have leverage over everybody else, right? There’s nobody else can do Starlink, nobody else can get, I, nobody else can get the rockets in space yet. Amazon and Jeff Bezos are trying, but they haven’t yet.

Elon: I hope he does. you know,  I actually agree with Jeff’s motivations. so I’m, let me put this way. If there was a button I could press that would delete, Blue Origin, I wouldn’t press it. Um, so I think, uh, it’s good that he’s spending money on, on, um, making rockets too. Um, you know, I suggest perhaps you spend more time on it, but, uh, you know, it’s up to him.  I should make a point here. So nothing, nothing any of my companies have done has been to stifle competition. In fact, we’ve done the opposite. So at Tesla, we have open-sourced our patents. Anyone can use our patents for free. How many companies do you know who’ve done that? Can you name one? I can’t. Um, at SpaceX, we don’t use patents. So I mean, said once in a while, we’ll, we’ll file a patent just so some patent troll doesn’t cause trouble, but we’re not stuffing any. We’ve done nothing anti-competitive. We’ve done nothing to stop our comp at all.

.. I just want to clarify for the audience because some companies have done anti-competitive things. I, I think the strange thing or the unusual thing about SpaceX and Tesla is that we’ve done things that have helped our competition. So at Tesla, um, we have made our Supercharger system open access. We made our charger technology available for free to the other manufacturers. The reason, I, no wall garden, we could have put a wall up, but instead we invited them in.

Interviewer: The reason I mentioned this though is because you’ve had this success in the physical physics world. You now have these very, uh, difficult decisions that have huge impacts on the world that are not physical decisions at all. They’re decisions of the mind, the decisions that you and others have to make, and there’s a question whether you should be making these decisions at all. And I, I think about it in the context of Starlink. Uh, obviously, there was the report about, uh, how it’s being used in Ukraine in the Russia War. There’s questions about what, you know, Taiwan, whether Taiwan should use it or will use it. I believe they’re not right now because they’re worried that at some point, maybe the Chinese will tell you that you have to, they have leverage over you and you’re going to have to turn that off, right? I mean, these are very difficult decisions, and I’m so curious how you think about that and not just the decisions, the fact that you have that power.

Elon: I just, I think it’s important for the audience to understand that the reason I have these powers is not because of some anti-competitive actions. It’s simply because we’ve executed very well.

Interviewer: Oh, I’m not dismissing that. I think there are so many people, by the way, who are huge supporters of what …

Elon: there are other satellites out there, you know,

Interviewer: but, but they’re not as good as yours. And the same, and we can say that maybe make the same argument out of cars and everything else. But as a result, that gives you enormous leverage, right? With the exception of that, by the way, these advertisers who aren’t on X. In every other instance, everybody needs you.

Elon: Well, I mean, nobody’s, they use our product if it’s better, then use somebody else’s product if it’s, their other product better.

Interviewer: And I accept that. And maybe one day somebody else create better products..

Elon: like, you know, how is it a bad thing to make better products than other companies?

Interviewer: And I, I want to go back to this, to the Starlink piece of it, though, because that has sort of a geopolitical ramification in terms of your power and how you think about that specific power and then, uh, the power that the US government might have either over you or not over you. The power the Chinese government might have over you or not over you and how those things get used.

Elon: I mean, what you suggesting

Interviewer: I’m asking the question around this this very idea of how these satellites are going to be used, whether you think that you should have control of them, whether the government should have control of them.

Elon: Do you trust the government?

Interviewer: Well, that’s, there’s a lot of people who don’t trust the government.

Elon: exactly.

Interviewer: But then this goes back to the trust of you, right?

Elon: I mean, like you said, we’re not the only company who has communication satellites. Our satellites are just much better than theirs, so it’s not like we have a monopoly.

Interviewer: Do you feel like anybody product? Do you feel anybody has leverage over you?

Elon Musk: I think at the end of the day, if we make bad products that people don’t want to use, then the users will vote with their resources and use something else.  I mean, certainly, I mean, my company’s overseen by regulators and, and while, um, you know, once, since SpaceX, Starlink, Tesla, are overseen by, you know, cumulatively over 100 regulators, uh, and, and actually more than that, few hundred regulators, uh, because you got, we’re in 55 countries, um, if, if you sum up all the times that I had had an argument with regulators of hundreds of regulators over decades, it, it can sound really terrible except, but they forgot to mention that there were 10 million regulations we complied with and only five that I disagreed with, but they L all the five, and it sounds like, wow, this guy’s a real maverick. I’m like, yeah, but what about the 10 million we complied with?

Interviewer: Do you let me let me one related thing on this and the leverage of countries and things over you and regulators, um, X is this free speech platform. You do business in China, lots of business in China. That’s an important part of your, your business, I imagine.

Elon: Well, lot SpaceX.

Interviewer: How do you think about the leverage that the Chinese have over you, and do they have leverage over you? And how do you feel about some people who would say, is it hypocritical for you to be doing business in China, or frankly in other countries, as it relates to X and other things that don’t follow this free speech path that you have espoused?

Elon Musk: The best that the X platform can do is adhere to the laws of any given country. Do you think there’s something more we could do than that?

Interview: I think it would be very hard, but I just wonder, given the sort of strong philosophical approach that you’ve been vocal about, whether you say to yourself, you know, maybe I shouldn’t be doing business in that country.

Elon Musk: Well, first of all, Starlink and SpaceX do no business in China whatsoever. Tesla has one of four factories for vehicle factories in China, and China is, you know, I don’t know, a quarter of our market or something like that. So it’s a quarter of the market of one company. The same is true, by the way, of all the other car companies. They also have something on that order of a quarter of their sales in China. So if that’s a problem for Tesla, it’s a problem for every car company.

Elon Musk: I mean, I think one has to be careful about not conflating the various companies because I can only do things that are within the bounds of the law. I cannot do beyond that. My aspiration is to do as much good as possible and to be as productive as possible within the bounds of what is legal. More than that, I cannot do.

 

Interviewer: I want to pivot and talk about AI for a moment. We had Jensen Wong here, who’s a big fan of yours, as you know.

Elon Musk: Yeah, Jensen’s awesome.

Interviewer: Talked about bringing you the first box, by the way, with Ilia. Interestingly enough, back in 2016.

Elon Musk: I think there’s a video of Jensen and me unpacking the first AI computer at Open AI.

Interviewer: So I’m curious, what do you think of what’s just happened over the past two weeks while you were dealing with this other headline, a series of headlines? There was a whole other series of headlines at Open AI. What did you think? Well, you founded it, co-founded it.

Elon Musk: Yeah, well, the whole arc of Open AI, frankly, is a little troubling because the reason for starting Open AI was to create a counterweight to Google and DeepMind, which at the time had two-thirds of all AI talent and basically infinite money and compute, and there was no counterweight. It was a unipolar world, and Larry and Page and I used to be very close friends, and I would stay at his house and I would talk to Larry until late hours of the night about AI safety.

Elon Musk: And it became apparent to me that Larry did not care about AI safety. I think perhaps the thing that gave it away was when he called me a speciesist for being pro-humanity, as in, you know, like a racist but pro-species. So I’m like, wait a second. What side are you on, Larry? And then I’m like, okay, listen, this guy’s calling me a speciesist; he doesn’t care about AI safety. We’ve got to have some counterpoint here because this seems like it could be, this is no good.

Elon Musk: So Open AI was actually started, and it was meant to be open source. I named it Open AI after open source. It is, in fact, closed source. Super, it should be renamed super closed source for maximum profit AI. So because this is what it actually is. I mean, fate loves irony. I mean, in fact, a friend of mine has this saying, like the way to predict outcomes is the most ironic outcome is the most likely. It’s like this razor-like the simplest sort of explanation is most likely. And my friend Jonah’s view is that the most ironic outcome is the most likely. And that’s what happened with Open AI. It’s gone from an open-source foundation to, suddenly, it’s like a 90 billion for-profit corporation with closed source. So I don’t know how you go from here to there, but that seems like a…I don’t know how you get… I don’t know if is this legal? I’m like legal. So…

Interviewer: But so, as you saw Sam Alman get out, yeah, by somebody, you know Ilia, and Ilia was somebody who was a friend of yours; you brought him there. Your relationship with Larry Page effectively broke down over you recruiting him away.

Elon Musk: I think that’s correct. That was the fight; that was the Larry refused to be friends with me after I recruited Ilia.

Interviewer: And so here’s Ilia apparently saying something is very wrong.

Elon Musk: I think we should be concerned about this because I think Ilia actually has a strong moral compass. He thinks about, you know, he really sweats it over questions of what is right. And if Ilia felt strongly enough to want to fire Sam, well, I think the world should know what was that reason.

Interviewer: Have you talked to him?

Elon Musk: I’ve reached out, but he doesn’t want to talk to anyone.

Interviewer: Have you talked to other people behind the scenes? Is this all happening?

Elon Musk: I’ve talked to a lot of people, and nobody I’ve not found anyone who knows. Why have you?

Interviewer: I think we are all still trying to find out.

Elon Musk: I mean, look, one of two things is either it was a serious thing, and we should know what it is, or it was not a serious thing, and then the board should resign.

Interviewer: What do you think of Sam Alman?

Elon Musk: I have mixed feelings about Sam. I do, um, you know, the ring of power, you know, can corrupt, um, and the ring of power…so, you know, I don’t know. I think I want to know why Ilia felt so strongly as to fire Sam. This sounds like a serious thing. I don’t think it was trivial. And I’m quite concerned that there’s some dangerous element of AI that they’ve discovered.

Interviewer: Yes, you think they’ve discovered something.

Elon Musk: That would be my guess.

Interviewer: Where are you with your own AI efforts relative to where you think Open AI is, where you think Google is, where you think the others are?

Elon Musk: I mean, on the AI front, I’m in somewhat of a quandary here because, um, I’ve thought AI could be something that would change the world in a significant way since I was in college. I mean, like 30 years ago. Now the reason I didn’t go by AI right from the get-go was that I was uncertain about which edge of the double-edged sword would be sharper, the good edge or the bad edge.

Elon Musk: So I held off on doing anything on AI; I could have created, I think, a leading AI company and kind of opening a, actually kind of is that because I was just uncertain if you make this magic genie, what will happen? You know, whereas I think building sustainable energy technology is much more of a single-edged sword, that is, single-edged good. Making life multiplanetary, I think, single-edged good. StarLink mostly single-edged good. I mean, giving people better connectivity to people that, you know, don’t have connectivity or too expensive offensive, I think, is very, you know, very much a good thing. StarLink was instrumental, by the way, in halting the Russian Advance the Ukrainians said so.

Elon Musk: I think there, but with AI, you’ve got the magic genie problem. You may think you want a magic genie, but once that genie’s out of the bottle, it’s hard to say what happens.

Interview: How far are we away from that genie being out of the bottle? You think we think it’s already out?

Elon Musk: I mean, the genie’s certainly poking his head out.

Interview: But AGI, the idea of artificial general intelligence, given what you now are working on yourself and, you know, how easy or hard it is to train, to create the inferences, to create the weights—I hope I’m not getting too far in the weeds of just how this works, but those are the basics behind the software square end of this.

Elon Musk: It’s funny, you know, all these weights, they’re just basically numbers in a comma-separated value file. And that’s how digital God, a CSV file, found that funny. But that’s kind of literally what it is. So, I think it’s coming pretty fast, you know,

Interviewer: Is that, I mean, uh, you famously have admitted to overstating how quickly things will happen. But how quickly do you think this will happen?

Elon Musk: If you say smarter than the smartest human at anything, it may not be then quite smarter than all humans, all machine-augmented humans, you know, because people got computers and stuff. Um, there’s a higher bar. But you say smaller than any, you know, can write as good a novel as say JK in or discover new physics or invent new technology. Um, I would say that we are less than 3 years from that point.

Interviewer: Let me ask you a question about XAI and what you’re doing, and um, because there’s an interesting thing that’s different, I think, about what you have relative to some of others, which is you have data, you have information, you have all of the stuff that everybody in here has put on the platform to sort through. Um, and I don’t know if everybody realized that initially. What is the value of that?

Elon Musk: Yeah, data is very important. Um, you could say data is probably more valuable than gold. Um, but then maybe you have actually, maybe you have more.

Interviewer: Maybe you have the gold in X in a different way, in a way again that I don’t know if the public appreciates what that means.

Elon Musk: Yes, um, X is the might be the single best source of data. Um, I mean, there are more links to X than anything else on Earth. Sometimes people think Facebook or Instagram is a bigger thing, but actually there are more links to X than anything. This is public information; you can Google it.

Elon Musk: It is where you would find what is happening right now on Earth at any given point in time.  The whole openAI drama played out on the X platform. So, it is where you would find what is happening right now on Earth at any given point in time. The whole open-eye drama played out, in fact, on the x-platform. Um, so it is one of the best sources of data. It’s not there, you know. Google certainly has a massive amount of data, so does Microsoft. Um, so it’s not like, but, but it is one of the best sources of data. Um..

Elon Musk: Can I ask you an interesting IP issue, which I think is actually something, uh? I can say as somebody who’s in the creator business and journalistic business and whatnot, uh, where care about copyright. So one of the things about training on data has been this idea that you’re not going to train or these things are not being trained on people’s copyrighted information. Historically, that’s been the concept.

Elon Musk: Yeah, that’s a huge lie.

Interviewer: Say that again.

Elon Musk: That’s these AI. Well, these AI are all trained on copyrighted data, obviously.

Interviewer: So you think it’s a lie when open AI says that this is not, none of these guys say they’re training on copyrighted data.

Elon Musk: That’s a lie. It’s a lie straight up. A straight-up lie. 100%. Obviously, it’s been trained on copyrighted data.

Interviewer: Okay, so let me ask a second question, which is all of the people who have been uploading me, like one every minute, all of the people who have been uploading articles, the best quotes from different articles, videos to X, all of that can be trained on. And it’s interesting because people put all of that there, um, and those quotes have historically been considered fair use, right? People are putting those quotes up there, and individually, on a fair use basis, you’d say, okay, that makes sense. But now there are people who do threads, and by the way, there may be multiple people who’ve done, you know, an article that has a thousand words. Technically, all thousand words could have made it onto X somehow. And effectively now you have this remarkable repository. And I wonder what you, how you think about that, again, and how you think the creative community and those who were the original IP owners should think about that.

Elon Musk: I don’t know, except to say that by the time these lawsuits are decided, we’ll have digital God, so, have to ask digital God at that point. Um, these lawsuits won’t be decided before on a timeframe that is relevant. Um,

Interviewer: Is that a good thing or a bad thing?

Elon Musk: I think we live, you know there’s that; I don’t know if it’s actually a real Chinese saying or not, but, uh, may you live in interesting times is apparently, uh, not a good thing. Um, but I would prefer to, personally, I would prefer to live in interesting times. Um, and we live in the most interesting of times, I think.  For a while there, I was really getting demotivated and losing sleep over the threat of AI danger. And then I finally sort of became fatalistic about it and said, well, even if I knew it was annihilation was certain, uh, would I choose to be alive at that time or not? and I said I probably would have choose to be alive at that time because it’s the most interesting thing. Um, even if there was nothing I could do about it. So then, you know, then basically sort of a fatalistic resignation helped me sleep at night because I was having trouble sleeping at night because of AI danger. Now what to do about it? I mean, I’ve been the biggest, the one banging the drum, the hardest by far, the longest, uh, or at least one of the longest, uh, for AI danger, and these regulatory things that are happening, the single biggest reason they’re happening is because of me.

Interviewer: You think they’re ever going to get their arms around it? We talked to the vice president this afternoon. She said she wants to regulate it. People have been trying to regulate social media for years and have done nothing, effectively.

Elon Musk: Well, there’s regulation around anything, which is like a physical danger to or a danger to the public. So like cars are heavily regulated, communications are heavily regulated; rockets and aircraft are heavily regulated. The general philosophy about regulation is that when something poses a danger to the public, there needs to be some government oversight. In my view, AI is more dangerous than nuclear bombs, and we regulate nuclear bombs. You can’t just go make your bomb in your backyard. I think we should have some kind of regulation with AI. Now, this tends to cause the AI accelerationists to get up in arms because they think AI is sort of heaven, basically.

Interviewer: But they typically don’t like regulation. You’ve pushed back on regulation for the most part in the world of Tesla, and there are many instances where we read articles about you pushing back on regulators. I’m curious why, in this instance, now that you own one of these businesses.

Elon Musk: As I said a moment ago, one should not take what is viewed in the media as the whole picture. There are literally hundreds (this is not an exaggeration) – probably 100 million regulations that my companies comply with, and there are probably five that we don’t. If we disagree with some of those regulations, it’s because we think the regulation that is meant to do good doesn’t actually do good.  Should not define regulation for the sake of regulations.

Interviewer: But the question here, If there are laws and rules, whether the idea is that you’re making the decision that the law and the rule shouldn’t be the law and the rule and then, right?

Elon Musk: No, I’m saying you’re fundamentally mistaken, and it should be obvious that you’re mistaken. My company’s Automotive is heavily regulated. We would not be allowed to put cars on the road if we did not comply with this vast body of regulation. You could fill up this stage with literally six feet high of regulations that you have to comply with to make a car. You could have a room full of phone books; that’s how big the regulations are. If you don’t comply with all of those, you can’t sell the car. If we don’t comply with all the regulations for rockets or for Starling, they shut us down. So, in fact, I am incredibly compliant with regulations. Now once in a while, there’ll be something that I disagree with. The reason I would disagree with it is that I think the regulation in that particular case, in that rare case, does not serve the public good. Therefore, I think it is my obligation to object to a regulation that is meant to serve the public good but doesn’t. That’s the only time I object, not because I seek to object. In fact, I’m incredibly rule-following.

Interviewer: Let me ask you a separate question, a social media-related question. We’ve been talking about TikTok today, ahead of the election. Sure. Uh, TikTok. What do you think of TikTok? Do you think it’s a national security threat?

Elon Musk: I don’t use TikTok. Um, say that again.

Interviewer: You don’t?

Elon Musk: I don’t personally use it, but for teenagers and people in their 20s, they seem almost religiously addicted to TikTok. Um, some people will watch TikTok for like two hours a day. Um, I stopped using TikTok when I felt the AI probing my mind, and it made me uncomfortable. So I stopped using it.  And in terms of anti-Semitic content, I mean, TikTok is rife with that. It has the most viral anti-Semitic content by far.

Interviewer: But do you think the Chinese government is using it to manipulate the minds of Americans?

Elon Musk: No.

Interviewer: Is that something that you think we should worry about? I mean, you have different states that are trying to ban it.

Elon Musk: I don’t think this is some Chinese government plot, um, but it is. The TikTok algorithm is entirely AI-powered, so it is really just trying to find the most viral thing possible. It’s what is going to keep you glued to the screen, right? That’s it.  Now, on sheer numbers, there are on the order of two billion Muslims in the world, and I think, uh, you know, a much smaller number of Jewish people, what, 20 million something? Uh, many orders of magnitude. So if you just look at content production just on a sheer numbers basis, it’s going to be overwhelmingly anti-Semitic.

Interviewer: Let me ask you a political question, and I’ve been trying to square this one in my head for a long time. In the last two or three years, you have moved decidedly to the right, I think.

Elon Musk: Have I?

Interviewer: Well, we can discuss this. I think that you have been espousing and promoting a number of Republican candidates and others. You’ve been very frustrated with the Biden administration over, I think, unions and feeling like they did not respect what you’ve created.

Elon Musk: Well, I mean, without doing nothing to provoke the Biden administration, they held an electric vehicle summit at the White House and specifically refused to let Tesla attend. This was in the first six months of the administration. Um, and we inquired, we’re like, we literally make more electric cars than everyone else combined. Why are we not allowed? Why are you only letting Ford, GM, Chrysler, and UAW, and you’re specifically disallowing us from the EV summit at the White House? We’ve done nothing to provoke them. Um, then Biden went on to add insult to injury and publicly said that GM was leading the electric car revolution. This was in the same quarter that Tesla made 300,000 electric cars, and GM made 26. Does that seem fair to you?

Interviewer: But tell me this then, it doesn’t seem fair. Um, and I’ve asked repeatedly, you’ve probably seen me.

Elon Musk: And by the way, I had a great relationship with Obama, so there’s not a, I voted for Obama, I stood in line for 6 hours to shake Obama’s hand, ok.

Interviewer: But let me ask on a personal level, this I can see it in your face. This hurt you personally,

Elon Musk: and it hurt the company too. And it was an insult. You know, Tesla has 140,000 employees. Okay, half of them are in the United States. Tesla has created more manufacturing jobs than everyone else combined.

Interviewer: So let me ask this then. You’ve devoted at least the last close to 20 years of your life, if not more, to the climate change, trying to get Tesla off the ground in part to improve climate. You’ve talked about that. And then so..

Elon Musk: it’s reverse psychology. Next level.

Interviewer: Well no, but so here’s the question, which is how do you square the support that you have given… I believe you were at a fundraiser for Viva Grama Swami, for example, who says that the climate issue is a hoax.

Elon Musk: Right. I disagree with him on that.

Interviewer: But I would think that would be such a singular issue for you. I would think that the climate issue would be such a singular issue for you that actually, it would disqualify almost anybody who didn’t take that issue seriously.

Elon Musk: Well, I haven’t endorsed anyone for president. I mean, I wanted to hear what he had to say because I think some of the things he says are pretty solid. You know, he’s concerned about government overreach, um, about government control of information. The degree to which old Twitter was basically a sock puppet of the government was ridiculous. So, you know, it seems to me that there’s a very severe violation of the First Amendment in terms of how much control the government had over old Twitter. And it no longer does. So, you know, there’s a reason for the First Amendment.  Um, the reason for the First Amendment, for freedom of speech, is because the people that immigrated to this country, uh, came from places where there was not freedom of speech. And they were like, you know what, we got to make sure that that’s constitutional. Um, because where they came from, if they said something, they’d be put in prison or there’d be, you know, something bad would happen to them. So, uh, and freedom of speech, you have to say when is it relevant? It’s only relevant when someone, someone you don’t like, can say something you don’t like, or it has no meaning. Um, and as soon as you sort of, you know, throw in the towel and concede to censorship, it is only a matter of time before someone censors you. And that is why we have the First Amendment.

Interviewer: Um, could you see yourself voting for President Biden if it’s a Biden-Trump election, for example?

Elon Musk: I think I would not vote for Biden.

Interviewer: You’d vote for Trump?

Elon Musk: I’m not saying I’d vote for Trump, but I mean, this is definitely a difficult choice here. Yeah, you know,

Interviewer: We would vote for Nikki Haley. Nikki Haley, by the way, wants all social media names to be exposed, as, you know…

Elon Musk: No, I think that’s outrageous. Yeah, no, I’m not going to vote for some pro-censor candidate. Like I said, I mean, I think these… You have to consider that there’s a lot of wisdom in these amendments, you know, in the Constitution. And, you know, a lot of these things that we take for granted here in the United States don’t even exist in Canada. There’s no constitutional right to freedom of speech in Canada.  So, you know, and there’s no Miranda rights in Canada. People think, like, you know, you have the right to remain silent, you don’t actually in Canada. Um, so, you know, I’m half Canadian. I can say these things. Um, but, you know, so, like, you just got… The freedom of speech is incredibly important. Even when people… And it’s actually especially important, in fact, it is only relevant when people you don’t like can say things you don’t like.

Interviewer: And do you think right now, meaning you think right now the Republican candidates or the Democrats are more inclined… I mean, this is where you go to, I assume, to woke and anti-woke and the mind virus issue that you’ve talked about. Which party do you think is more pro-freedom of speech, given all the things you’ve seen? Because we also see, you know, DeSantis, you know, preventing people from reading certain things. Maybe you think that’s correct.

Elon Musk: No. Look, we actually are in an odd situation here where, on balance, the Democrats appear to be more pro-censorship than the Republicans. Me, that used to be the opposite. It used to be, you know, the left position was freedom of speech. You know, I believe at one point, the ACLU even defended the right of someone to claim that they were a Nazi or something like that. You know, so like, they really were, like, the left was freedom of speech is fundamental.

.. Um, and I mean, my at least perception, perhaps it is inaccurate, is that the pro-censorship is more on the left than the right. Um, we certainly get more complaints from the left than the right, let me put it that way. So, um, but my aspiration for the xplatform is that it is the best source of truth or the least inaccurate source of truth. Um, and, well, you know, I don’t know, people believe me or not, but I think honesty is the best policy. And I think that the truth will win over time.

.. And the, you know, we’ve got this great system and it’s getting better called Community Notes, uh, which is fantastic, I think, at correcting falsehoods or adding context. In fact, we make a point of not removing anything but only adding context. Now, that context could include that this is completely false and here’s why. Um, and, and, and no one is immune to this. I’m not immune to it. Advertisers are not immune to it. In fact, we’ve had Community Notes which has caused us some loss in advertising revenue.

.. Speaking of loss in advertising revenue, um, when, if a Community Note, if there’s false advertising, the Community Note will say this is false and here is why. I mean, like there’s one specific example that is public knowledge, so I’ll mention it, which is at one point Uber had this ad which said “own like a boss,” uh, and it was Community Noted. If by boss you mean $12.47 an hour, this did cause at least a temporary suspension of advertising from Uber.

Interviewer: I got to ask you a question that might make everybody in the room uncomfortable or not uncomfortable, but it goes to the Free Speech issue. The New York Times company and the New York Times newspaper—it appeared over the summer to be throttled.

Elon Musk: Well, we do require that everyone has to buy a subscription, and we don’t make exceptions for anyone. If I want the New York Times, I have to pay for a subscription, and they don’t give me a free subscription, so I’m not going to give them a free subscription. But were you throttling the New York Times relative to other news organizations, relative to everybody else? Was it specific to the Times because they didn’t buy a subscription, by the way, only cost like $1,000 a month? So if they just do that, then they’re back in the saddle.

Interviewer: But you are saying that it was throttled?

Elon Musk: No, I’m saying costs a little bit of money..

Interviewer: I mean, was there a conversation that you had with somebody where you said, “Look, I’m unhappy with the Times. They should either be buying the subscription or I don’t like their content or whatever.”

Elon Musk: Any organization that refuses to buy a subscription is not going to be recommended.

Interviewer: But then what does that say about free speech and what does that say about amplifying?

Elon Musk: Free speech costs a little bit, right?

Interviewer: But that’s an interesting…

Elon Musk: Yeah, it’s like South Park, where they say, you know, freedom isn’t free; it costs a buck five or whatever. So, but it’s pretty cheap, okay? It’s low cost freedom.

Interviewer: I got a couple more questions for you. You’re headed back to Texas after this to launch the Cybertruck. It’s going to be a big launch, but I wanted to ask you right now, more broadly, just about the car business and what you see actually happening. Specifically, the government put in place lots of policies to try to encourage more EVs. One of the things that’s happened uniquely is you have now a lot of car companies saying, actually, this is too ambitious for us. These plans are too ambitious. Four thousand dealers just yesterday sent a letter to the White House saying, “This has gone too far. You’re going too far.” Is this idea that maybe there’s not enough demand for EVs? That the American public has not bought into it? I mean, they bought into it with your company, but they haven’t bought into it broadly enough.

Elon Musk: I think if you make a compelling electric car, people will buy it, no question about it. Electric car sales in China are gigantic. That’s by far the biggest category. And I think that would be the case, you know. It’s worth noting, probably the best reputation of that is that the Tesla Model Y will be the best selling car of any kind on Earth this year, of any kind on Earth this year, gasoline or otherwise.

Interviewer: Is there another car company that you think is doing a good job with EVs?

Elon Musk: I mean, I think the Chinese car companies are extremely competitive. By far, our toughest competition is in China. So, I mean, there’s a lot of people out there who think that the top 10 car companies are going to be Tesla followed by nine Chinese car companies. I think they might not be wrong. So, China is super good at manufacturing, and the work ethic is incredible. So, you know, like if we consider different leagues of competitiveness at Tesla, we consider the Chinese League to be the most competitive. And, by the way, we do very well in China because our China team is the best in China.

Interviewer: How worried are you that the unionization effort that just took place at, well, not an effort, but the new wages and the like at GM and Ford, are they coming for you? And they are coming for you. What is that going to mean to you in your business?

Elon Musk: I mean, I think it’s generally not good to have an adversarial relationship between people on the line, one group at the company and another group. In fact, I disagree with the idea of unions, but perhaps for a reason that is different than people may expect, which is I just don’t like anything which creates kind of a Lords and peasants sort of thing. And I think the unions naturally try to create negativity in a company and create a sort of Lords and peasants situation. There are many people at Tesla who have gone from working on the line to being in senior management. There is no Lords and peasants. Everyone eats at the same table, everyone parks in the same parking lot. You know, at GM, there’s a special elevator for only senior executives. We have no such thing at Tesla. You know, and the thing is that I actually know the people on the line because I worked on the line, and I walked the line, and I slept in the factory, and I worked beside them. So I’m no stranger to them. And there actually many times where I’ve said, “Well, can’t we just hold a union vote?” But apparently, a company is not allowed to hold a union vote. So it has to be somehow called for, but the union can’t do it. So I said, “Well, just hold a vote and see what happens.” The actual problem is the opposite. It’s not that people are trapped at Tesla building cars. The difficulty is how do we retain great people to do the hard work of building cars when they have like six other opportunities that they can do that are easier? That’s the actual difficulty, is that building cars is hard work, and there are much easier jobs. And I just want to say that I’m incredibly appreciative of those who build cars, and they know it. You know, so there’s that. I don’t know, maybe there will be unionized. If Tesla gets unionized, it will be because we deserve it and we failed in some way. But we certainly try hard to ensure the prosperity of everyone. We give everyone stock options. We’ve made many people who were just working the line, who didn’t even know what stocks were, we’ve made them millionaires.

Interviewer: So, we’re going to run out of time. Final couple of quick questions. When do you have the time to tweet or to post? I actually think about it all the time. As I said, I go to the bathroom sometimes. I use it all the time, meaning if we were to open up our phones and look at the screen time, what does yours look like?

Elon: Well, about every three hours, I make a trip to the laboratory.

Interviewer: That’s the only time you do this. It seems like you’re on there a lot.

Elon: No, I mean, there’ll be brief moments between meetings. I mean, it’s not obviously, I have like 17 jobs. So, you know. And no, I guess technically it’s work at this point.

Interviewer: It is. But I’m thinking just in terms of your mind share. I mean, by the way, there’s a lot of people who should be working who are on this,

Elon: Technically posting on Twitter is work. It does count as work. So that’s, you know, there’s that. But no, I mean, I think I’m on. Well, I guess usually probably I’m on for longer than I think I am. I know,

Interviewer: but do you think that’s five hours a day?

Elon: If you look at the screen time, like number of hours per week, it’s, you know, that’s a scary number. It’s probably, I don’t know, it’s a little over an hour a day or something like that.

Interviewer: Just an hour a day. If we really looked at this together, do you have your phone with you? you want to look?

Elon Musk: Screen time, general screen time. Sometimes this is a scary number, oh, I just got a new phone. So I think this is not accurate because it says it’s one minute. Pretty sure it’s more than that. Wait, it’s over the week. Okay, so it’s still wrong. It’s more than four minutes. I just got a new phone. So this is not accurate. It literally says four minutes.

Interviewer: New phone. Tim Cook sends you the phone? I should ask, by the way, because I just met Tim Cook. Do you feel like you’re going to have to have a battle with him eventually? Is that the next fight? over the App Store, You ever make a phone? Sam Alman’s apparently thinking about making a phone with Johnny I.

Elon Musk: I mean, I don’t think there’s a real need to make a phone. If there’s an essential need to make a phone, I’ll make a phone. But I got a lot of fish to fry. So, I mean, I do think there’s a fundamental challenge that phone makers have at this point because you’ve got a basically a black rectangle. You know, how do you make that better?

Interviewer: So, do you want to do that? What does that look like in Elon’s head?

Elon Musk: No, that’s literally, yeah, good phrase, in the head. Neuralink. You know, the best interface would be a neural interface directly to your brain. So, that would be a neural…

Interviewer: How far do you think from that? And how excited or scary does that seem to be? And we read these headlines, obviously, about monkeys who died, as you know. What should we think about that?

Elon Musk: Yeah, actually, this is the USDA inspector who came by Neuralink facilities, literally said, in her entire career, she has never seen a better Animal Care Facility. It is, we are the nicest to animals that you could possibly be, even to the rats and mice, even though they did the plague and everything. So, it is like monkey paradise. So, the thing that gets conflated is that there were some terminal monkeys where, you know, this is long, this is actually several years ago, where the monkeys were about to die, and we’re like, “Okay, we’ve got an experimental device. It’s the kind of thing we only put on a monkey that’s about to die.” And then, you know, now the monkey died, but it didn’t die because of the Neuralink. It died because it had a terminal case of cancer or something like that. So, Neuralink has never caused the death of a monkey.  Unless they’re hiding something from me. It has never caused the death of a monkey. And, in fact, we’ve now had monkeys with Neuralink implants for two, three years, and they’re doing great. And we’ve even replaced the Neuralink twice, and we’re getting ready to do the first implants, hopefully in a few months. The only implementations of Neuralink, I think, are unequivocally good. Speaking of the double-edged sword, I think these early implementations are single-edged swords. Because the first implementations will be to enable people who have lost the brain-body connection to be able to operate a computer or a phone faster than someone who has hands that work. So, you can imagine if Stephen Hawking could communicate faster than someone who had full body functionality, how incredible that would be. Well, that’s what this device will do. And we should have proof of that in a human, hopefully in a few months. It already works, you know, in monkeys and works quite well with monkeys that can play video games just using just thinking. And the next application after those, you know, dealing with tetraplegic and quadriplegics is going to be Vision. Vision is the next thing. So, if somebody has lost both eyes or the optic nerve has failed, basically, where there’s no possibility of having some ocular correction, that would be the next thing for Neuralink is a direct Vision interface. And in fact, then you could be like Jordi LaForge from Star Trek. You could see in any frequency, actually. You could see in radar if you want.

Interviewer: Two final questions, and then we’re going to end this conversation, which I think has taken everybody inside the mind of Elon Musk today.  It actually goes to self-driving cars and Vision and everything else. And I asked this question of Pete Buttigieg, Transportation Secretary. It’s actually something you retweeted, so I wanted to ask you the same question. There’s a big question about autonomous vehicles and the safety of them. But there’s also a question about when it will be politically palatable in this country for people to die in cars that are controlled by computers, which is to say we have 35, 40,000 deaths every year in this country. Yeah, if you could bring that number down to 10,000, 5,000, that might be a great thing. But do we think that the country will accept the idea that 5,000 people, that your family might have perished in a vehicle as a result, not of a human making a mistake, but of a computer?

Elon Musk: Yes. Well, first of all, humans are terrible drivers. So, people text and drive. They drink and drive. They get into arguments. They do all sorts of things in cars that they should not do. So, it’s actually remarkable that there are not more deaths than there are. What we’ll find with computer driving is, I think, probably an order of magnitude reduction in deaths. I think now, and the US has actually far fewer deaths per capita than the rest of the world. If you go worldwide, I think there’s something close to a million deaths per year due to automotive accidents. So, I think computer driving will probably drop that by 90% or more. It won’t be perfect, but it’ll be 10 times better.

Interviewer: And do you think that the public will accept that? Do you think the government will accept that?

Elon Musk: Well, at in large numbers, it will simply be so obviously true that it really cannot be denied.

Interviewer: And what do you think? I know we’ve talked about the timeline before, and I know people

Interviewer: And what do you think? I know we’ve talked about the timeline before, and I know people have criticized you, uh, for putting out timelines that may not have come true just yet. But what do you think it really is? And by the way, do you feel like, do you ever say to yourself, ‘I shouldn’t have said that.

Elon Musk: sure, of course.’ Um, wait, I shouldn’t have said that, um, so, uh, yeah.  I, me, I’m optimistic about—I mean, I think I’m naturally optimistic about time scales, and if I was not naturally optimistic, I wouldn’t be doing the things that I’m doing. Um, I mean, I certainly wouldn’t have a SpaceX rocket company or an electric car company if I didn’t have some sort of pathological optimism, frankly. Um, so, um, as you pointed out, many people said they would fail, and in fact, I actually—I agreed with them. I said, ‘Yes, it probably will fail,’ and they’re like, ‘Okay.’ Um, but I thought SpaceX and Tesla had less than a 10% chance of success when we started them. Um, so, yeah, anyway. But the self-driving thing is—I’ve been optimistic about it. We certainly made a lot of progress. If anybody has tried the very has been using the sort of full self-driving beta, the progress is, you know, every year has been substantial. Um, it’s really now at the point where, in most places, it’ll take you from one place to another with no interventions. Um, and the data is unequivocal that supervised full self-driving is somewhere around four times safer, maybe more, than just human driving by themselves. Um, so I’m—I, you know, I—I can certainly see it coming, actually.

Really, do you think it’s another five or 10 years? I mean, people—

Elon Musk: no, no, no, definitely not, definitely not. Um,

and do you feel like investors have invested in something that hasn’t happened yet? Is that fair to them? And that’s the other question that people have about that.

Elon Musk: Well, I mean, I think they’ve all, with rare exception, uh, thought it wasn’t happening, so they were investing in despite thinking they were very clear that they don’t think it’s real. So they don’t say, ‘Oh, we just believe everything Y says, hook and sinker.’ Uh, and—but the thing is that, I mean, it would be a fair criticism of me to say that I am late, but it isn’t, but I always deliver in the end.

Interviewer: Let me ask you a final question. I took note of this. It was November 11th, and you took to Twitter and you wrote only two words. You said, ‘Amplify empathy, I was taken aback by that, given all the things that have been going on in the world. Um, do you remember what you were thinking?

Elon Musk: Well, I think it’s quite literally and..

Interviewer: I understand it, but what was—what was going on? Why did you write that?

Elon Musk: Well, I was encouraging people to amplify empathy, literally. I tend to be quite literal. Um..

Interviewer: But was there something that had happened that you had seen that you said to yourself, ‘I need to—I want to say that?’

Elon Musk: I think I was talking to some friends, and we all agreed that we should try to amplify empathy, and so I wrote, ‘Amplify empathy.’

Interviewer: Um, if you wanted an unvarnished look inside the mind of Elon Musk, I think you just saw it.

Elon Musk: Look, sometimes it’s pretty simple, you know.

Interviewer: Elon Musk, thank you very, very much for the conversation.

Elon Musk: Thank you. Appreciate it very, very much. Thank you.

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