Let us dispense with the pleasantries. The news that Elon Musk’s SpaceX has disclosed its rules for elite investors is not a breakthrough in democratising space. It is a confirmation that the heavens, like the earth, are being parceled out to the entitled few. The rules are simple: you must be an accredited investor, which in plain English means you have a net worth of at least £1 million or an income exceeding £200,000 per annum. This is not a revolution. This is a velvet rope for the plutocracy.
We have seen this before. In the Gilded Age, Vanderbilt and Rockefeller built railways and oil empires that were open only to those who could afford the ticket. The Victorian era gave us joint-stock companies where the common man could buy a share, but the real control remained with the ‘gentleman capitalists’. Today, Musk repackages the same exclusivity with a Silicon Valley sheen. The public is invited to gawk at launches on YouTube, but not to own a piece of the rocket. This is not innovation. This is a return to the age of privateers.
Why does this matter? Because space is the ultimate frontier. It is the one domain that could, in theory, unite humanity in a common purpose. Instead, it is being carved into fiefdoms. The rules for SpaceX investors are not about risk management; they are about preserving a class system. The accredited investor rule was created by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1982 to protect the naive from bad investments. But it has become a tool to keep the plebeians out. If you cannot lose £1 million, you cannot play. The subtext is that the poor are too stupid to manage their money, while the rich have the wisdom to gamble on Mars colonies.
This is intellectual decadence dressed as pragmatism. We have come to accept that the only way to participate in the future is to already be wealthy. The same logic applies to hedge funds, private equity, and now space travel. The result is a society where the masses are spectators, not participants. We cheer for Musk’s rockets as if they were gladiators in the Colosseum, forgetting that we are the ones in the cheap seats.
What would a fair system look like? Imagine a space exploration trust where every citizen gets a nominal share. The dividends would be trivial, but the ownership would be real. It would bind the nation to the project. Instead, we have a system where the spoils go to the few who can afford the entry fee. This is not capitalism; it is cronyism. And it is a recipe for resentment.
I am not naive. I understand that SpaceX needs capital, and that high-risk ventures require sophisticated investors. But the rules are not set in stone. They are a choice. And the choice we have made is to perpetuate an aristocracy of wealth. The Romans had their patricians; we have our accredited investors. The difference is that the Romans at least pretended to care about the republic.
In the end, the question is not who can buy shares in SpaceX. It is what kind of future we want. If we continue to allow the elite to gatekeep the stars, we will get a future where the rich live on Mars and the rest of us watch from a dying Earth. That is not progress. That is a sequel to every dystopian novel ever written. Wake up, people. The rocket is leaving, and you are not on it.









