Technology

Elon Musk mocks Biden for ignoring his company’s historic space flight

Elon Musk took to social media on Sunday to mock President Biden for failing to comment on his company SpaceX’s historic space flight.

“The President of the United States has refused to even acknowledge the 4 newest American astronauts who helped raise hundreds of millions of dollars for St. Jude,” a user asked on Twitter. “What’s your theory on why that is?”

Musk responded, “He’s still sleeping.”

Asked about Musk’s comment, the White House sent The Hill a statement that didn’t mention SpaceX by name but applauded “the ingenuity of our private sector.” 

“It’s that ingenuity that will help our nation continue advancing to the next of our nation’s space exploration,” said a senior administration official. “As NASA administrator Nelson said, they’ve helped demonstrate that low-Earth orbit is open for business.”

Bill Nelson, a former U.S. senator and NASA administrator, tweeted his congratulations after SpaceX launched the first all-civilian crew into orbit from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on the Crew Dragon spacecraft.

The crew included Chris Sembroski, an engineer for Lockheed Martin; Jared Isaacman, a billionaire leading the mission; Sian Proctor, a college professor from Phoenix; and Hayley Arceneaux, a pediatric cancer survivor and current physician’s assistant.

During the three-day space mission, SpaceX advised that “the @Inspiration4x crew will conduct scientific research designed to advance human health on Earth and during future long-duration spaceflights.”

The Crew Dragon spacecraft successfully landed back on Earth off the Florida coast on Saturday.

The mission also aimed to raise $200 million for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, where Arceneaux was once treated. The Inspiration4 mission had raise $160.2 million when the crew returned on Saturday, and Musk pledged to donate an additional $50 million, bringing the total to $210 million.

Though Biden and the White House have not commented on the historic flight, other high-profile agencies, companies, and officials have.

“Welcome back, #Inspiration4!” NASA tweeted on Saturday. “The first all-private orbital spaceflight mission has splashed down, representing yet another commercial success story in our longstanding vision to make @NASAKennedy a multi-user spaceport.”

 

Even Jeff Bezos, the former Amazon CEO and founder of the competing space company Blue Origin, publicly celebrated the launch. 

 

This article was updated at 3:54 with comments from the White House.