So the man with the rocket ships has done it. Elon Musk, the emperor of electric cars and interplanetary ambition, is now the world’s first trillionaire. The headlines shriek of British investors reaping rewards, of a new dawn for capitalism. I see something far less uplifting: the final, gaudy gasp of a civilisation that has mistaken wealth for wisdom.
Let us not pretend this is merely a story of entrepreneurial success. Musk is no Carnegie or Rockefeller, who built empires in an age when industry meant sweat and steel. He is a creature of our time: a master of speculation, a wizard of hype, a man whose fortune rests as much on the fevered dreams of stock traders as on any tangible achievement. Yes, SpaceX launches rockets, and Tesla sells cars. But the valuation that has pushed him past the trillion mark owes more to the mystique of a cult leader than to sound economics. We have seen this before. In the dying days of the Roman Republic, men like Crassus amassed obscene fortunes through property speculation and political manipulation. They were not builders. They were predators.
And what of the British investors? The BBC tells us that pension funds and private portfolios will benefit. No doubt a few thousand people will enjoy a slightly more comfortable retirement. But let us ask the harder question: what does it mean for a nation to celebrate the enrichment of a foreign oligarch while its own industrial base crumbles? We export financial services, not manufacturing. Our brightest minds are lured to Silicon Valley, not to Manchester or Birmingham. We have become a rentier economy, a nation of shopkeepers in the worst sense, living off the crumbs of American tech giants.
The parallels with the late Victorians are instructive. Then, as now, the ruling classes congratulated themselves on their sophistication while the foundations of their power rotted. The aristocrats of the 1890s invested in American railroads and Argentine bonds, oblivious to the social fissures that would soon explode into world war. Today, we celebrate a trillionaire while our own young people cannot afford homes, our public services buckle under austerity, and our faith in democratic institutions evaporates. This is the classic pattern of decadence: the ruling elite becomes fixated on abstractions like “innovation” and “growth” while ignoring the concrete decay around them.
Musk himself is a walking symbol of this crisis. He is brilliant, yes, but also erratic, addicted to controversy, a man who seems to view himself as a character in a science fiction novel rather than a responsible steward of colossal resources. A society that venerates such a figure has lost its moral compass. We used to admire statesmen, scientists, artists. Now we worship billionaires who tweet memes. That is not progress. That is regression to a pre-modern cult of personality, wrapped in a veneer of libertarian ideology.
Do not misunderstand me. I am not opposed to wealth creation. But wealth must serve society, not the other way around. The Victorian plutocrats at least had the decency to endow libraries and museums, to build hospitals and universities. They understood noblesse oblige, however imperfectly. Musk’s philanthropy is a joke: a pittance compared to his fortune, directed toward projects that seem designed primarily to stroke his own ego. His Mars colony will be a gated community for the uber-rich, not a lifeline for humanity.
So as the headlines blare, ask yourself what this trillion-dollar milestone truly signifies. It is not a triumph of human ingenuity. It is a symptom of a global economy that has become unmoored from reality, a system that rewards hype over substance, and a culture that has lost the ability to distinguish genuine achievement from spectacular wealth. The fall of Rome did not happen in a day. It happened over centuries of such decadence. We are in the late afternoon of our empire, and Elon Musk is one of the courtiers dancing at our sunset.









