…that’s not to say that I won’t criticize him in the future, or that I don’t continue to have some issues with his reporting and analyses, but if it comes down to a judgment call, I’m very much inclined to give the man some slack, because he did something that we desperately need more journalists—and people in positions of authority—to do:
He said he was wrong.
About a month ago, I quote-posted the following.
It's
great that Roberts is on the side of the angels here, but did he ever
admit that by buying into the benevolent Elon PR package he was part of
the problem?
See below for details
[image or embed]
— markpalko.bsky.social (@markpalko.bsky.social) December 18, 2025 at 9:08 PM
Here were the West Coast Stat View posts I linked to. As you can see, I did not go easy on Roberts.
_______________________________________
"Musk is not in it for the money."
I need to come back to this article
because there's a lot of wrong packed in here but this one brief section
needs to be singled out because it spells out one of the fundamental
lies upon which the myth of Elon rests. It is a lie that is completely
transparent and yet persists to this day.David Roberts writing for Vox:
Musk
is not in it for the money. If all he wanted was money, he wouldn’t
keep risking enormous sums of it on schemes that nine out of 10 people
predict will fail.
Instead, as he’s been very forthright in saying, he’s trying to address what he sees as humanity’s most pressing problems.
Even
by 2016, it was obvious that Musk had gotten extremely rich from
government subsidies and by playing the game mainly with other people's
money. Well over a year before the Roberts piece came out, the LA Times laid out in great detail the dependency on taxpayer money while the then upcoming SolarCity merger looked like (and turned out to be) an attempt to have Tesla stockholders save Musk's dying company. And this wasn't the first time he had used investors' money from another company to bail out his ill-conceived solar business.
Musk
has now become the world's richest man largely by manipulating stocks,
using questionable accounting practices and flat out lying about his
products and paradoxically he's gotten away with it in no small part
because the standard narrative holds that his motives are pure and he's
"not in it for the money."
I suppose we're lucky. Imagine the level of criminal behavior we'd have seen if he were just motivated by greed.
_____________________________________________
Saving the world by buying luxury cars was always a painful example of first world thinking.
Following up on Monday's post ("The biggest automotive scandal since VW's Dieselgate and guess who's behind it... "), Edward Niedermeyer, the guy who literally wrote the book on Tesla, provides some important context for the company's latest scandal.
For
much of the past decade, Tesla’s popularization of electric vehicles
has centered on one innovation above all others: solving “range
anxiety,” or the worry that your EV will run out of juice midtrip. By
packing more batteries into its cars and establishing a fast-charging
network, Elon Musk’s automaker sold the seductive idea that EVs could be
a drop-in, one-to-one replacement for gas-powered vehicles. Today, that
idea is the most fundamental orthodoxy underpinning the “EV
transition,” shaping government policy and consumer tastes alike.
...
From
the very beginning, even before Elon Musk was involved with the
company, Tesla’s vision was simple: put enough lithium-ion batteries
into a car to give it blistering performance and long range. This
resulted in a high-end product that was tailor-made to be marketed to
the emerging tech elite, with the promise that the resulting high price
would be magically reduced through scale and technological innovation.
In a landscape of modest, short-range but still not cheap commuter EVs,
Tesla’s gas-rivaling range (and later, fast-charging network) felt like a
vision of a viable future and not just another hair shirt for
environmentalists.
...
Thanks to Tesla’s leadership,
consumers are buying the biggest battery EVs they can, thinking that
they’re saving the planet when they’re actually hoarding unused
batteries to ward off their personal range anxiety. Because Americans
only drive 40 miles a day on average, and because 95 percent of car
trips are 30 miles or less, the range figures Tesla has normalized are
wildly overkill and exacerbate battery supply chain issues that are only
just starting to bite. Only wild inefficiency can make it feel like EVs
can replace gas cars perfectly, and even then, with the best charging
network available, long-distance journeys will still never be as fast
and efficient as they are with gas cars, because it will always take
longer to juice up an EV.
The big lie at the heart of Tesla’s
big-battery approach is that EVs can directly replace gas cars without
any real behavioral change on the part of consumers. But no matter how
desperate the public and lawmakers are to believe this—it would be
nice!—it simply isn’t so: Internal combustion and battery electric
vehicles are fundamentally different technologies, with different
strengths and weaknesses. No battery electric will ever be as good at
unplanned, long-range trips in remote areas as a gas car, just as no gas
car will ever refill its tank overnight.
Instead of following
Tesla’s lead and getting into a battery-size arms race that will make
the future of cars even more expensive, oversized, dangerous, and
wasteful than they already are, we simply need to accept that the market
must change. Instead of giving the biggest incentives to the biggest
batteries, government policy should focus on electrifying the vast
majority of daily trips, which start and end at home and could easily be
handled by vehicles with 100 miles of range or less. That means
incentivizing home charging, not the roadtrips that make up a tiny
percentage of trips, and nudging consumers toward using the smallest
battery possible for those regular trips. That means incentivizing
e-bikes, plug-in hybrids, and other small battery electric vehicles, not
holding fleet electrification hostage to the 5 percent use cases.
Musk's
promise of salvation without sacrifice has found an eager audience with
the technocratic wing of the pundit class, as has the rest of hiss
mythology. The idea of Musk and Musk-like tech messiahs support Noah
Smith's gospel of abundance.
It
required entrepreneurs like Elon Musk to invest their lives and their
fortunes in battery companies that pushed down the cost of batteries
through mass production and scale effects, rather than starting
companies that made death drones or ad tech.
Musk buys his
batteries from Panasonic then lies about their performance. (We'll get
into the whole bursting-into-flames thing some other time.)
Vox's David Roberts bought
the full service "Musk is not in it for the money." PR package complete
with SolarCity scam. Roberts' credulity became a bit easier to
understand when I got to this: " (For insight on Musk, see Ashlee Vance’s biography or this invaluable series on Wait But Why.)"
Vance's
book is deeply problematic, a largely trusting account of a serial
liar, but at least it looks good in comparison to the WBW posts, which
start with an entry entitled "Elon Musk: The World’s Raddest Man."
Things go down hill from there.
Lots of people are now
catching on that Musk was and is a con man whose reputation rests on
claiming credit for things that were either done by other people or
simply made up, but for many of those people there's a lag. They haven't
come to terms with the possibility that Elon wasn't a tech messiah
because there are no tech messiahs.
_____________________________________________
A few hours later, I saw my post on Bluesky had a reply.
Yeah.
Mea culpa! I was new to WBW then & somewhat taken with it, before
its tragic flaws were clear to me. Same with Musk I guess.
— David Roberts (@volts.wtf) December 18, 2025 at 9:44 PM
You’ll notice he didn’t say “we” were wrong or that “everyone” was wrong. That’s the standard weasel line—something that passes itself off as soul-searching and self-criticism while evading any personal responsibility.
When a publication like The New York Times (arguably the worst offender) says “we all got this wrong” or “no one saw this coming,” it is almost always a lie. If you go back and check the record, you will pretty much invariably see that lots of people—including some prominent and highly respected voices with excellent track records—were pointing out the flaws in the standard narrative in real time, while the mainstream press was either ignoring them or even mocking them for being out of step.
Roberts does not try to evade responsibility by saying we were all wrong about Elon Musk, or even that the majority of his colleagues were also taken in (something that was very much the case). Nor does he resort to the all-too-common claim that his earlier stance on Elon was correct at the time, but that the Tech Messiah has undergone a mysterious Jekyll-and-Hyde transformation in the past five years.
Hearing an unqualified mea culpa is satisfying, but there’s more at stake here than showing character or not being annoying. When journalists and other authorities try to acknowledge now-obvious lapses in reporting, judgment, and analysis without taking responsibility, they are forced to introduce all sorts of small lies, omissions, and distortions to make their case. They can’t be honest with us because they can’t be honest with themselves.
The result is that nothing is learned, making us destined to repeat the same mistakes over and over—sometimes as little as eight years apart.