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by Victor Tangermann
February 10, 2026
from
Futurism Website

"Life cannot
just be
about one sad
thing
after
another"...
Since at least the early 2000s,
Elon Musk
has been obsessed with the idea of
colonizing Mars, a hostile and arid
planet tens of millions of miles away.
In its earliest iteration, his plan was to refurbish an
intercontinental ballistic missile to land on the Red Planet and
unfurl a "Mars Oasis"
- a small greenhouse that would grow plants and inspire humankind.
The greenhouse never materialized, but Musk's ambitions steadily
grew.
Once he founded
SpaceX, he dedicated the company to developing space
travel tech to establish a self-sustaining colony on the planet. In
2017, he promised that the first Mars-bound mission would
launch in 2022, with the first crewed spacecraft following two years
later.
He's clearly been personally obsessed with
the idea, showing up at public events while wearing an
"Occupy
Mars" T-shirt.
He's also heavily criticized NASA for
prioritizing the Moon, calling it a "distraction."
But over the weekend, the mercurial CEO appeared
to have had a
major change of heart,
announcing the company's plans to colonize
Mars were officially being put on ice for at least half a
decade.
"For those unaware, SpaceX has already
shifted focus to building a self-growing city on
the Moon, as we can
potentially achieve that in less than ten years, whereas
Mars would take 20+ years," he
tweeted.
It's a flabbergasting reversal, and one that Musk
seems to be working through publicly on his X feed.
In one opaque tweet that appeared to be missing
at least one important word, Musk reflected on his current emotional
state.
"Life cannot just be about one sad thing
after another," he
wrote while responding to his
own tweet about SpaceX building
a "system that allows anyone to travel to Moon."
"There must also be things that make us super excited and
inspired about the future," he added.
"This is one of [sic] things. Bigtime."
It remains unclear whether he was talking about
his excitement for building a city on the Moon or whether he was
consoling himself over suddenly deprioritizing his decades-long
dream.
Netizens on his social media network were caught off guard by
the unusually glum missive.
"U ok?"
reads one response, in the form
of a meme.
The vast majority of the other most-liked replies
pointed out that humanity was already dealing with enough problems
back on Earth.
"Most people can't afford to pay their bills,
let alone even look towards the Moon," one user wrote.
Musk, who has a
long track record of imbibing in
drugs like
ketamine, appears to be going
through it these days.
"Whoever said 'money can't buy happiness'
really knew what they were talking about," he
tweeted last week, a comment
that drew little pity considering he is the richest man in the
world.
Along with a slew of anti-immigrant posts,
Musk has also been retweeting
optimistic visualizations of what a
Moon city might look like.
Rumors suggest,
SpaceX is planning to go public at a
record-breaking
valuation of $1.25 trillion,
which could bring plenty of renewed scrutiny to Musk's space
colonization ambitions.
Perhaps he was simply trying to save face with
his turn to the Moon.
By massively shifting the goalposts, he could
also have a better shot at attracting government contracts, which
have
kept SpaceX from bankruptcy since
its earliest days.
For now,
Mars is still technically on the
table.
"That said, SpaceX will also strive to build
a Mars city and begin doing so in about five to seven years, but
the overriding priority is securing the future of civilization
and the Moon is faster," Musk wrote in his announcement on
Sunday.
However, SpaceX's website currently
still states that,
the company is "planning to launch the first
Starships to Mars in 2026",
...an enormously ambitious goal, considering the
spacecraft has yet to successfully launch to space and stick the
landing, let alone make it to anywhere past the immediate vicinity
of Earth.
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