Jeff Bezos Reportedly Has Secretive "Personal Reasons" for Wanting to Escape to Mars
"There’s no democracy in space."
At some point, Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos reportedly made a cryptic admission to a power broker — and that strange comment is taking on new significance in light of another recent message he's sending to the public.
Damn that feels a but dark. Otherwise I support the idea that we should build colonize on other planets in order to
Bezos is a dark guy. He isnt for humanity. Look at what he owns and how he operates.
He is a typical elite. People like him feel they are better to run society than the population.
So weird that we see this phenomenon through history. Elites have always behaved and thinked the same.
F*ck the peasents
To be fair, most, as we see on here, are lazy, not willing to learn, and looking for handouts.
Few are the ones who actually do something to impact, well, much of anything.
As they say, nobody ever erected a statue for a critic.
Following WaPo's surprise decision not to endorse either candidate for president — reportedly because its billionaire owner vetoed staff's decision to name Kamala Harris as its pick — New Yorker journalist Sarah Larson recounted her own Bezos lore.
"Once again I’m reflecting on the time I interviewed a powerful guy who knows Jeff Bezos," she wrote on X, "and who offhandedly told me, 'Jeff has personal reasons for wanting to get to Mars... I’m not comfortable sharing what they are.'"
Larson jokingly followed up her own tweet with a seeming reference to the newspaper's tagline, "Democracy dies in darkness," which was taken up in the aftermath of Donald Trump's first presidential win in 2016.
"There’s no democracy in space," the New Yorker writer quipped.
Larson's has an impressive portfolio at the magazine, but the fact that she's not naming her source makes it impossible to know which powerful Bezos acquaintance she's referring to — or what Bezos' secretive personal reasons may be, for that matter.
Bezos has seemed to distance himself from Martian colonizing ambitions as his rival apparent, Elon Musk, goes all-in on the vision.
Years after stepping down as CEO of Amazon to spend more time on his space launch company, Blue Origin, the billionaire told podcaster Lex Fridman that he thinks that humans will likely live inside massive cylindrical space stations.