“Though he is already preparing to send astronauts to the
moon, Musk has been consistently underestimated – and now the danger he
presents is being underestimated as well.” — Richard Cooke
How did the world’s richest man become the face of America’s reactionary
revolution?
At the helm of X, bankrolling far-right lawsuits, and parroting white
nationalist conspiracy theories to millions, Elon Musk is no longer a tech
eccentric with odd politics — he’s the public face of the MAGA
counter-revolution. Alongside Trump and the digital culture warriors of the new
right, Musk is acting as both financier and foot soldier, reshaping the online
public sphere in the image of a paranoid, hyper-capitalist backlash. He’s not
just posting through it — he’s helping lead it.
In this urgent and razor-sharp essay, award-winning journalist Richard Cooke
dissects the political descent of Elon Musk: from self-described moderate to
reactionary provocateur, from self-mythologised innovator to conspiracy peddler
and chaos agent. With forensic clarity, Cooke exposes the roots of Musk’s
transformation — the mythology of genius, the libertarian cult of disruption,
and the tech elite’s growing comfort with authoritarianism.
Dark Star Rising investigates how the richest man alive came to dominate what
was once the digital town square — and what it means when that square is turned
into a plaything of the paranoid elite. As Cooke reveals, Musk’s trajectory is
not an anomaly but a warning: when billionaires cosplay as rebels and
monopolise the means of communication, democracy itself hangs in the balance.
Dark Star Rising is searing account of the political devolution of Elon Musk —
and what it reveals about the tech elite’s descent into far-right reaction.
About the Author
RICHARD COOKE is a multi-award-winning author, reporter and
screenwriter. His reporting has appeared in the New York Times,
the Guardian, the Washington Post, WIRED and many
other publications.
He is a former Columnist of the Year, winner of the June
Andrews Award for Arts Journalism and the Walkley Award for Feature Writing
(Australia’s premier award for journalism). His fourth book is a cultural
history of Wikipedia.