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elleng

(137,063 posts)
Sun Dec 29, 2024, 02:44 PM Dec 29

'It is now fair to ask the question: Is Elon Musk a national security risk? [View all]

According to numerous interviews and remarks, Mr. Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency co-leader, Vivek Ramaswamy, once appeared to believe he was. In May 2023, Mr. Ramaswamy went so far as to publicly state, “I have no reason to think Elon won’t jump like a circus monkey when Xi Jinping calls in the hour of need,” a reference to China’s leader. In a separate X post targeting Mr. Musk, he wrote, “the U.S. needs leaders who aren’t in China’s pocket.”

Mr. Ramaswamy has since walked back his numerous public criticisms of Mr. Musk, but he was right to raise concerns. According to news reports, Mr. Musk and his rocket company, SpaceX, face federal reviews from the Air Force, the Defense Department’s Office of Inspector General and the under secretary of defense for intelligence and security for failing to provide details of Mr. Musk’s meetings with foreign leaders and other potential violations of national-security rules.

These alleged infractions are just the beginning of my worries. Mr. Musk’s business ventures are heavily reliant on China. He borrowed at least $1.4 billion from banks controlled by the Chinese government to help build Tesla’s Shanghai gigafactory, which was responsible for more than half of Tesla’s global deliveries in the third quarter of 2024.

China does not tend to give things away. The country’s laws stipulate that the Communist Party can demand intelligence from any company doing business in China, in exchange for participating in the country’s markets.'>>>

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/29/opinion/elon-musk-china-classified-secrets-national-security-russia-doge.html

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Trump can decide when he takes over in January. Stay tuned! OAITW r.2.0 Dec 29 #1
Well, I do not. think he could pass the background check to be a central office telephone worker. LiberalArkie Dec 29 #2
Crash Helmet 4 Point Seat Belt Going to be a Long 4 Years R U Ready Oneear Dec 29 #3
Hasn't he always been a national security risk? SWBTATTReg Dec 29 #4
Yes. elleng Dec 29 #5
I want to know why more people aren't jumping up and down and screaming yellow dahlia Dec 29 #6
Perhaps voter fatigue...people are tired of politics, tired of hearing tRUMP's mouth, tired of the endless SWBTATTReg Dec 29 #7
Fair point. I'm tired... yellow dahlia Dec 29 #12
Scream to whom, Merrick the Meek, the media, whom do you suggest ? republianmushroom Dec 29 #9
Fair point. yellow dahlia Dec 29 #11
Everyone is afraid of Trump and Musk. Irish_Dem Dec 29 #13
Timothy Snyder warned us in "On Tyranny" - yellow dahlia Dec 29 #17
Brazil thought him a national security risk enough to B.See Dec 29 #8
I figured he was when he bought Twitter. Initech Dec 29 #10
All republicans are a national security risk. dickthegrouch Dec 29 #14
Yes, Musk is a security risk LetMyPeopleVote Dec 29 #15
uh.....yeah ..... DoBW Dec 29 #16
Yes, and it's fair to ask the question "Is Donald Trump a national security risk." Neither question will receive a Martin68 Monday #18
I think Musk does whatever he thinks is necessary to turn a profit. patphil Monday #19
Doesn't he owe a billion dollars or so SARose Monday #20
Leon needs to hop 'board his spaceship... GoldenMezzoDiva Monday #21
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