Turning Science Fiction Into Science Fact
Elon Musk stood before an audience at SpaceX headquarters in Starbase, Texas, and laid out what might be the most Musk pitch ever: "We wanna make Star Trek real." Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and senior Pentagon officials were on hand to hear the billionaire CEO explain how SpaceX plans to turn science fiction into science fact.
Musk's vision involves interplanetary travel powered by "big spaceships," with the tantalizing possibility that humans might encounter alien civilizations along the way. It's an ambitious goal that blends commercial spaceflight with humanity's oldest question about whether we're alone in the universe.
Pentagon Embraces SpaceX Technology and AI
Hegseth's visit to Starbase wasn't just about inspirational speeches. The Defense Secretary highlighted the Pentagon's push toward artificial intelligence, praising SpaceX's technological achievements. He also revealed plans to integrate xAI's AI model Grok into Pentagon operations later this month, signaling deeper ties between Musk's companies and military operations.
Meanwhile, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, the former CEO of Shift4 Payments Inc. (FOUR), has been reinforcing the space agency's commitment to returning humans to the lunar surface and eventually reaching Mars. Isaacman emphasized that nuclear energy will play a central role in NASA's broader space exploration ambitions.




