Alon Musk’s interview with CBS Sunday Morning seemed to be a strange start, as reporter David Pog asked SpaceX’s CEO about his ideas on his colleague Donald Trump’s policies, including growing restrictions on international students.
“I think we want to stick to the subject of the day, eg, as opposed to spaceships, you know, the president’s policy,” said Musk.
Pog became surprised, responding, “Oh, well, I was told, ‘anything is good.”
“No,” Kasturi said, looking at the distance. “Not good.”
However, he commented on the dispute around his government’s efficiency department, which is making aggressive cuts in federal agencies, and the Kasturi complained to “Whipping Boy for everything”.
“If something is cut, real or imagined, everyone would blame Dogi,” he said.
Musk also suggested that when it comes to the Trump administration, she is “a bit stuck in a point”, where “I don’t want to speak against the administration, but I do not want to take responsibility for the administration to do everything.”
Pog’s interview was held on Tuesday before SpaceX’s Starship Test flight, which successfully launched the ship, but lost control over the retirement. Asked if they have anything to connect different companies-apart from spacex, Tesla (which is facing anti-musk protests), XAI and X (East Twitter), Nurlink, and Boring Company replied, “I think you can think of businesses that improve the possible projections of civilization.”
At that time, Musk was pulled back from his government work, but he said that he would be involved for “day or two” per week. He told Pog, “Dogi is going to continue as a way of life. And I will have some participation in it, but as I publicly said, I have to be focused on companies at this point.”
Pog said that after her conversation, an interview clip of Musk’s comments, criticizing the Trump-supported budget bill, removed her own news cycle-and soon after, Musk said that he was finishing his time as a special government employee. Trump, however, later said that Musk “is not really leaving.”