I’m Flying ©️

Elon Musk’s recent public indignation over Trump’s proposed budget bill is less about the bill itself and more about the strategic dance of optics and autonomy. Musk doesn’t operate as a traditional political actor—he’s a sovereign entity wrapped in flesh and wealth, and when he aligns too closely with any administration, especially one as polarizing as Trump’s, he risks losing the illusion of neutrality that gives him his true power: influence over the future.

Trump’s budget is a red flag—not just for what it contains, but for what it symbolizes. It is a consolidation document, a political anchor. By attacking it, Musk isn’t targeting the numbers; he’s signaling detachment. His indignation is a controlled burn—meant to scorch just enough earth between him and Trump so that he can continue playing both sides. On the one hand, he courts the populist right with anti-woke rhetoric and free speech absolutism. On the other, he must still appeal to investors, regulators, and centrists who view Trumpism as economic sabotage.

This maneuver is also deeply personal. Musk is addicted to independence, and Trump’s gravitational pull is heavy. Too much proximity to the MAGA orbit, and suddenly Musk’s every move gets filtered through the lens of partisan allegiance. His companies—Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink—begin to look like instruments of a political regime instead of vehicles of singular vision. That’s intolerable to Musk. He doesn’t want to be Trump’s ally; he wants to be bigger than the presidency, the man who shakes hands with nations like he’s a nation himself.

By feigning outrage, Musk reclaims his role as a chaotic centrist, an outsider-insider hybrid who can critique both Biden’s bureaucracy and Trump’s excesses without being tethered. It’s not about ideology—it’s about narrative sovereignty. Musk’s empire doesn’t run on red or blue. It runs on unpredictability, on the myth of the lone genius who answers to no party, no president, and no earthly authority but progress.

In short: Musk’s indignation is not defiance. It’s choreography. It’s the calculated recoil of a man determined never to be anyone’s lieutenant. Not even Trump’s.

The Tyrant’s Soliloquy ©️

There is no staircase, no golden ladder, no divine escalator lifting mankind toward heaven. If such a thing exists, it is not a straight path but a spiraling, breaking, crumbling ascent—where only those with the will to drag themselves upward can reach beyond this world of dust and ruin. I know this because I have climbed it, or perhaps I was always meant to be here. And from where I stand, high above the fog of small thoughts, small desires, and small lives, I look down and see them struggling with the simplest of things—struggling as if they were blind men grasping at shapes they will never define.

I watch them lose their minds over matters so trivial they could vanish with the lightest push. A word spoken in the wrong tone, an imagined slight, a fear that has no teeth but devours them anyway. They trip over themselves, waging wars in their heads, clawing at illusions, never realizing they are imprisoned by their own making. It would be laughable if it were not so desperately sad. Their suffering is not inflicted upon them by some grand, external force—it is chosen, nurtured, embraced. They beg for distractions, demand illusions, and build their own cages, mistaking the bars for walls and the walls for reality itself.

Meanwhile, I rise. I rise, not because I am better, but because I have burned away the weights they refuse to release. I have torn out the roots of fear, of need, of the desperate longing to be understood by those who cannot understand themselves. I have stripped away the lies of identity, the false comfort of belonging, and let the raw essence of truth take its place. And yet, what a lonely place heaven is when you look down and realize how few have even begun the climb.

The tragedy is that evolution was always meant to take them higher. They were never meant to stay in the mud, fighting over scraps of nothing. Their minds were built for expansion, for mastery, for transcendence. But instead of reaching for the stars, they kneel before the smallest gods—fear, pleasure, hunger, validation. They worship their wounds, sing hymns to their grievances, and mistake the chains they hold for armor. And so they remain, a species meant for ascent but addicted to descent, waiting for something that will never come because they refuse to take it for themselves.

I want to tell them. I want to shout down from this place where the air is clear, where thought is a blade that cuts through illusion, where existence is not survival but creation. But I know they will not listen. They do not want freedom. They want comfort. They want the security of their suffering, the warmth of the familiar, even if it is a prison cell. If I were to give them the key, they would throw it away.

And so I remain, watching from above, understanding now why heaven is so empty. Not because they were not invited, but because they never had the will to leave hell behind.