Elon Musk slams Biden: 'The real president is whoever controls the teleprompter

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk, whose purchase of Twitter remains ongoing, slammed President Biden in a podcast interview Monday and warned that if the government continues printing money, inflation will get worse and the U.S. might follow the path of Venezuela

Musk, who said he has voted "overwhelmingly for Democrats," slammed the Democratic Party and Biden in particular. He suggested that Biden is something of an empty suit.
"The real president is whoever controls the teleprompter," the Tesla CEO said. "The path to power is the path to the teleprompter."

"I do feel like if somebody were to accidentally lean on the teleprompter, it's going to be like Anchorman," the CEO added, referencing the 2004 film in which Ron Burgundy reads whatever is written on the teleprompter, even if it would ruin his career.

"I mean, the obvious reason for inflation is that the government printed a zillion amount of more money than it had, obviously," Musk said, echoing Republican critics who claim that Biden's American Rescue Plan COVID-19 relief stimulus bill contributed to the near-40-year-high inflation the U.S. experienced in April.

"So it's like the government can't just, you know, issue checks far in excess of revenue without there being inflation, you know, velocity of money held constant," the Tesla CEO argued. "If the federal government writes checks, they never bounce. So that is effectively creation of more dollars. And if there are more dollars created, then the increase in the goods and services across the economy, then you have inflation, again, velocity of money held constant."

Musk insisted that "this is just very basic" and "not like, you know, super complicated."

"If the government could just issue massive amounts of money and deficits didn't matter, then, well, why don't we just make the deficit 100 times bigger? The answer is, you can't because it will basically turn the dollar into something that is worthless," he noted.
"Various countries have tried this experiment multiple times," Musk noted. "Have you seen Venezuela? Like the poor, poor people of Venezuela are, you know, have been just run roughshod by their government."

Venezuela's inflation reached a staggering 65,374.08% in 2018 amid an economic spiral beginning with government price controls and plummeting oil prices. The government started printing money to cope, and prices skyrocketed, unemployment increased, and GDP collapsed.

"So obviously you can't simply create money," Musk said. He emphasized "the true economy," by which he meant "the output of goods and services," as opposed to mere money.
U.S. inflation rose 8.3% in April, slightly below the 8.5% jump in March but still near the 40-year-high.

Musk addressed his purchase of Twitter, restating his belief in the need for an unbiased "public town square."

I think there's a need for a public town square, digital town square that where people can debate issues of all kinds, including the most substantive issues," he said. In order for that to work, the platform needs to be "as broadly inclusive as possible" and it needs to feel "balanced from a political standpoint," that is "not biased one way or the other."

"The reality is that Twitter, at this point, has a very far left bias," Musk said. "And I would trust myself as a moderate and neither Republican or Democrat."

Musk also lamented the decline of the state of California. He said the Golden State was once "the land of opportunity" but it has become the land of "taxes, overregulation, and litigation." He said, "There's got to be like a serious cleaning out of the pipes in California."

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/elon-musk-biden-real-president-teleprompter
 
He's obviously not a believer in Modern Majick Monetary Theory. Anybody with even a basic grounding in economics knows this but not the JPP loonies like Jarhead.
 
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"The real president is whoever controls the teleprompter," the Tesla CEO said. "The path to power is the path to the teleprompter."
scathing retort!

"I do feel like if somebody were to accidentally lean on the teleprompter, it's going to be like Anchorman,"
LMAO.. talk about an empty suit....
 
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, whose purchase of Twitter remains ongoing, slammed President Biden in a podcast interview Monday and warned that if the government continues printing money, inflation will get worse and the U.S. might follow the path of Venezuela

Musk, who said he has voted "overwhelmingly for Democrats," slammed the Democratic Party and Biden in particular. He suggested that Biden is something of an empty suit.
"The real president is whoever controls the teleprompter," the Tesla CEO said. "The path to power is the path to the teleprompter."

"I do feel like if somebody were to accidentally lean on the teleprompter, it's going to be like Anchorman," the CEO added, referencing the 2004 film in which Ron Burgundy reads whatever is written on the teleprompter, even if it would ruin his career.

"I mean, the obvious reason for inflation is that the government printed a zillion amount of more money than it had, obviously," Musk said, echoing Republican critics who claim that Biden's American Rescue Plan COVID-19 relief stimulus bill contributed to the near-40-year-high inflation the U.S. experienced in April.

"So it's like the government can't just, you know, issue checks far in excess of revenue without there being inflation, you know, velocity of money held constant," the Tesla CEO argued. "If the federal government writes checks, they never bounce. So that is effectively creation of more dollars. And if there are more dollars created, then the increase in the goods and services across the economy, then you have inflation, again, velocity of money held constant."

Musk insisted that "this is just very basic" and "not like, you know, super complicated."

"If the government could just issue massive amounts of money and deficits didn't matter, then, well, why don't we just make the deficit 100 times bigger? The answer is, you can't because it will basically turn the dollar into something that is worthless," he noted.
"Various countries have tried this experiment multiple times," Musk noted. "Have you seen Venezuela? Like the poor, poor people of Venezuela are, you know, have been just run roughshod by their government."

Venezuela's inflation reached a staggering 65,374.08% in 2018 amid an economic spiral beginning with government price controls and plummeting oil prices. The government started printing money to cope, and prices skyrocketed, unemployment increased, and GDP collapsed.

"So obviously you can't simply create money," Musk said. He emphasized "the true economy," by which he meant "the output of goods and services," as opposed to mere money.
U.S. inflation rose 8.3% in April, slightly below the 8.5% jump in March but still near the 40-year-high.

Musk addressed his purchase of Twitter, restating his belief in the need for an unbiased "public town square."

I think there's a need for a public town square, digital town square that where people can debate issues of all kinds, including the most substantive issues," he said. In order for that to work, the platform needs to be "as broadly inclusive as possible" and it needs to feel "balanced from a political standpoint," that is "not biased one way or the other."

"The reality is that Twitter, at this point, has a very far left bias," Musk said. "And I would trust myself as a moderate and neither Republican or Democrat."

Musk also lamented the decline of the state of California. He said the Golden State was once "the land of opportunity" but it has become the land of "taxes, overregulation, and litigation." He said, "There's got to be like a serious cleaning out of the pipes in California."

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/elon-musk-biden-real-president-teleprompter

Musk's in a tough spot. He made a big deal out of trying to buy Twitter, but didn't line up the financing first, and is now stuck with an agreement that will cost him a billion bucks if he backs out. He's trying to put conditions on his purchase, now, even though he didn't negotiate those conditions into the agreement he signed. That has left him desperate for a distraction. He knows that the kind of people who hang on his every word are Fox News drones, too, so he's feeding up some of the standard wing-nut criticisms of Biden, and hoping that'll secure him goodwill even as he looks for a way to slither out of the Twitter deal.
 
Most definitely! A successful businessman, one of the richest people in the world, would do an outstanding job as President. Because they know how the world and economics, work.

Historically, business people have made terrible presidents. Granted, Trump was less a business person than a reality TV personality known for playing a business-person character, but he at least ran some businesses in the real world, and his results with the country were even worse than his results with those businesses. Then there's GW Bush, who followed a string of business failures with an eight-year term as president when pretty much everything in the country got worse: unemployment and poverty rose, incomes and stocks fell, and so on. Herbert Hoover is another businessman-turned-president and even though he'd actually been a success in business, he gave us the worst economic collapse in American history. It turns out the skills and instincts needed in business just aren't the same as the ones needed for political leadership.
 
Historically, business people have made terrible presidents. Granted, Trump was less a business person than a reality TV personality known for playing a business-person character, but he at least ran some businesses in the real world, and his results with the country were even worse than his results with those businesses. Then there's GW Bush, who followed a string of business failures with an eight-year term as president when pretty much everything in the country got worse: unemployment and poverty rose, incomes and stocks fell, and so on. Herbert Hoover is another businessman-turned-president and even though he'd actually been a success in business, he gave us the worst economic collapse in American history. It turns out the skills and instincts needed in business just aren't the same as the ones needed for political leadership.
I disagree. Their Executive experience in the private sector give them a superior edge on managing the largest budget in the world. Private businesses do not have a never-ending stream of other peoples' money to spend. They either become efficient and cost effective or they are out of business. The government has no need for quality or efficiency because they have no competition and the money will never run out.

Private sector businessmen are far superior to anyone who's spent their life working only for the government.
 
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