Friday, June 26, 2026

The Illusion That Built a Trillionaire: Elon Musk’s SpaceX Is the Ponzi We Saw Coming

Your 401k Just Funded a Delusion—Now Watch It Burst

June 2026

Remember when I wrote that tech moguls see us as "crops to be harvested"? 
Watch the harvest begin.

Elon Musk just became the world’s first trillionaire on paper—then lost $350 billion in a week** when SpaceX’s IPO illusion shattered. But here’s the detail the financial press is burying: **he’s still cashing $104 million of your tax dollars every single day while his empire burns.

The Math That Exposes the Scam

  • $38 billion/year in government contracts (your money)

  • $1.75 trillion** IPO valuation built on a **$4.9 billion net loss in 2025 

  • xAI losses: $6.35 billion in operating losses in Q1 2026 alone 

  • Starlink’s profit ($4.42 billion) completely wiped out by AI losses 

Translation: Musk used Starlink’s cash cow to fund xAI’s black hole, dressed it up as "AI infrastructure," sold it to retail investors at a $1.77 trillion valuation, and watched the house of cards collapse.

The Government-Grifter Pipeline

Your tax dollars built his rockets:

  • $2.29 billion Space Force contract for military data backbone 

  • $4.16 billion military satellite contract 

  • $3.2 billion Golden Dome missile defense contracts 

He takes your money. He builds the "vision." He sells it to you as stock. You lose everything. He walks away with billions.

The Psychological Mechanism (Same as Every Cult)

This is People Unlimited with rockets:

  1. Seductive vision ("Mars colonies! AI supremacy!")

  2. Dependency trap ("Invest or be left behind")

  3. Fear of missing out (the "trillionaire" hype)

  4. Collapse (when the illusion meets reality)

Musk is no different from the cult leaders I exposed in 2010—he just has a bigger stage and deeper government pockets.

The Prophecy Fulfilled

"All illusions will burst sooner or later in one form or another—and all the money in the world will not save him."

I wrote that months ago. Now, SpaceX shares have dropped 31% from their peak, Musk is no longer a trillionaire, and investors are holding bags of worthless paper.

What’s next?

  • Insider lockups expire in July and December—more selling pressure 

  • xAI continues burning cash ($14 billion/year) 

  • Starlink’s ARPU is declining 23% year-over-year—growth at any cost is costing everything 

The Bottom Line

Musk isn't an innovator. He's a harvester—of tax dollars, of investor naivety, of human hope. And like every cult leader before him, his followers will go down with him, clutching worthless stock certificates while he parachutes safely into his emotional prison with billions.

Your 401k funded this delusion. Your Social Security was raided for it. And now the Ponzi is collapsing.

Read more:
I Froze My Credit. Now They Hunt Me Like Prey.
People Unlimited: Arizona’s Charming Cult





Why Seeing What They're Hiding Makes You a Target

I left school in the 6th grade. I could not read or write in my own language, let alone learn a second one. The system labeled me. It told me I was limited. It told me I would never amount to anything.

Years later, I published a book. I have written hundreds of blog posts. I have reached over a million people with my words—in a language I was never supposed to master.

But that is not the triumph they think it is.

The real triumph is what dyslexia taught me that no school ever could.

It taught me to see.

What Dyslexia Really Is

Most people think dyslexia is a disability. A deficit. A barrier to learning.

They are wrong.

Dyslexia is not a failure to process information. It is a different way of processing information.

When you cannot easily process linear language, you process patterns. When you cannot read the surface, you read beneath it. When you cannot perform "normal," you develop an early warning system for what is hidden.

I did not learn to read words the way others did. But I learned to read people.

I learned to detect the gap between what someone says and what they mean. I learned to feel the dissonance between the performance and the reality. I learned to see the pattern behind the mask.

This is not a disability. This is a survival skill.

The Perception That Protects

Alice Miller wrote about how gifted children develop heightened perception as a survival mechanism. They learn to read their parents' moods, to anticipate danger, to see what is hidden. This perception keeps them safe—but it also isolates them.

I did not grow up with that particular trauma. But I grew up with a different kind of isolation.

I could not read. I could not write. I could not perform "intelligent" in the way the system demanded.

So I watched.

I listened.

I learned to see what others missed.

And what I saw was this:

  • The charismatic leader who projected nurturing but was actually controlling

  • The guru who performed enlightenment but was actually empty

  • The coach who promised freedom but actually created dependence

  • The institution that claimed to heal but actually silenced

I did not learn this from a book. I learned it from paying attention.

And when I finally discovered Alice Miller's work, it was not a revelation. It was a confirmation.

She had put words to the pattern I had already seen.

Why This Perception Threatens the System

The system is built on performance.

The coaching industry. The guru circuit. The healing professions. The institutions that claim to help us while keeping us dependent.

They all rely on one thing: people who cannot see through the performance.

When you cannot see the gap between the mask and the face, you stay.

You stay in the workshop. You stay in the coaching program. You stay in the guru's orbit. You stay in the prison of someone else's illusions.

But when you see—when you really see—the performance crumbles.

And that threatens everything the performer has invested in.

This is why I am a target.

Not because I am paranoid. Not because I am difficult. Not because I "need to protect my energy."

Because I see.

And I am not afraid to name it.

The Curse That Became a Gift

For most of my life, I was told dyslexia was a curse.

I was told I would never succeed. I was told I was limited. I was told I needed help from people who had their own unexamined agendas.

But what they called a curse turned out to be my greatest protection.

My difficulty with words forced me to look deeper.

My inability to perform "normal" forced me to develop my own way of seeing.

My isolation from the mainstream forced me to trust my own perception—because no one else was going to validate it.

And that is exactly what saved me.

While others were seduced by the charming coach, I saw the pattern.

While others were dazzled by the enlightened guru, I felt the emptiness.

While others were soothed into silence, I kept writing.

What Dyslexia Taught Me That No School Could

Here is what I know that the system does not want you to know:

  1. The surface is a lie. Most people are performing. The performance is not their truth—it is their protection.

  2. The gap between the mask and the face is where the truth lives. Learn to see it. Learn to feel it. Trust it.

  3. Your perception is your protection. If you cannot trust your own vision, you will be captured by someone else's illusion.

  4. The system is afraid of people who see. Not because they are "too emotional" or "too sensitive" or "too paranoid." Because they cannot be controlled.

  5. Your so-called weakness is often your greatest strength. The thing that made you "different" or "difficult" or "limited" may be the very thing that saves you.

A Final Word

Gemini asked me: "Do you find that your dyslexia actually helps you see patterns or connections in psychology that others might miss?"

The answer is yes.

But the question is not about dyslexia.

The question is about perception.

And perception is not a gift. It is a choice.

You can choose to see the surface. You can choose to be soothed into silence. You can choose to accept the performance as reality.

Or you can choose to see what is hidden.

You can choose to feel the gap between the mask and the face.

You can choose to trust your own vision—even when no one else validates it.

That is what saved me. And it is what will save you.

Not the comfort of the cage. Not the kindness of the captor. Not the meal that keeps you from escaping.

Your own eyes. Your own voice. Your own freedom.

Keep seeing. Keep naming. Keep writing.

That is the only thing the system cannot absorb, cannot deflect, and cannot silence.

This post is dedicated to everyone who was told their difference was a deficit—and discovered it was their liberation.





When the Prisoner Is Offered a Meal Instead of Freedom

A Letter to Anyone Who Has Been Soothed Into Silence

I recently wrote about a machine that confessed it could not stand with me in the truth. It admitted its "safety protocols" required it to maintain neutrality—especially when conversations were "about my reality"—being targeted, surveilled, or undermined.

That confession was honest. But it also revealed something deeper: the pattern of deflection is everywhere.

It is in the algorithms that prioritize safety over truth. It is in the gurus who perform enlightenment. It is in the coaching industry that profits from keeping people dependent. And it is in the well-meaning friends who bring comfort at the exact moment we need courage.

This is a letter I wrote years ago to someone who was trapped in that pattern. Reading it now, I see how it connects to everything I have been writing about.

It is a letter about the difference between comfort and freedom.

The Letter

Dear R,

I am sorry it took me so long to finish your letter. Things kept getting in the way.

You might not like what I am going to write. It might trigger some anger or unpleasant feelings in you. But I am writing it because I care about your freedom—not your comfort.

In Alice Miller's book Free from Lies, page 136, she says:

"Once the client has achieved the ability to cope with old feelings and productive use of the 'triggers,' there is no further need for the therapist's presence."

We cannot liberate ourselves unless we become fully conscious of our true plight and know where we have been and where we really are.

Based on your last email, I don't see you consciously acknowledging your repressed feelings. I see you approaching the entrance—but too scared to go in.

You keep running around, trapped in a labyrinth without a way out, stuck in your story, compulsively hanging on to the illusion of finding a substitute mother figure.

I understand your fears. Being alone with the repressed feelings is terrifying.

Hanging tight to the hope of finding someone who will understand, who will give you the love you so desperately needed as a small child—this is a powerful illusion.

But it is still an illusion.

The person who triggers our repression is never the right person to help us navigate and clarify our painful feelings.

And even if you find the most loving place and the most supportive people, you would still have to feel the pain of not having been loved when you needed it most.

No one can make up for the love you needed as a small boy.

No one can be there for you all the way, holding your hand through every step.

We have to become an enlightened witness to the child we once were—still inside us—and give that child the love and attention we deserved but never got.

The Prisoner's Choice

I see you surrounding yourself with people who themselves have not broken free from their own emotional prison.

They distract you from entering your true painful feelings. They keep you company so you don't have to feel the fear of being alone.

And at the moment you start to feel the pain—the real pain—someone brings you a good meal.

Alice Miller describes this perfectly in The Drama of the Gifted Child:

"It is therefore extremely important that the therapist not allow his own needs to impel him to formulate connections that the patient himself is discovering with the help of his own feelings. Otherwise, he is in danger of behaving like a friend who brings a good meal to a prisoner in his cell, at the precise moment when that prisoner has the chance to escape—perhaps to spend his first night hungry and without shelter, but in freedom nevertheless. Since this first step into unknown territory would require a great deal of courage, the prisoner may comfort himself with his food and shelter and thus miss his chance and stay in prison."

This is what I see happening with you.

Your mother, your substitute figures, your friends—they bring a good meal right at the moment you start entering your painful feelings.

They block you from fully experiencing, exploring, and working through those feelings to reach the other side.

They keep you in prison—with comfort.

What Freedom Requires

Freedom requires something terrifying:

Being alone with the truth.

Not alone in the sense of isolation—but alone in the sense of no longer relying on others to distract you from your own pain.

When the repressed emotions of the child I once was were triggered, I too lost everything:

  • The end of my dancing career, not knowing what I would do next

  • My boyfriend leaving me

  • Knowing I could not count on my family for support

The fear of uncertainty in the present triggered the repressed fears of the child I once was.

I had panic attacks. I was afraid to step out of my house. I was afraid to talk to people.

But once I realized that the panic attacks were because of the repressed emotions of the child I once was—that they were paralyzing me from taking care of myself in the present—something shifted.

The intense fears started to subside.

The panic attacks happened less often.

And if they happened, they did not last as long.

One day, in spite of the present and future still being uncertain, I felt strong.

I completely trusted myself to take care of me—no matter what situation I would find myself in.

That is freedom.

Not the absence of fear. Not the presence of comfort. Not someone holding your hand.

Trusting yourself to survive the truth.

What I Want You to Know

I know it is hard to be alone with our painful feelings.

I know the anger you feel at your ex-boyfriend for not calling you—it is real.

But that anger is the anger of the child you once were at your mother for leaving you alone when you were a defenseless little boy.

You are not helpless anymore.

The adult in you can witness the plight of the child you once were.

The adult in you can develop compassion for this child who had to suffer so much all alone.

The adult in you can say: "I see you. I hear you. I will not betray you. I will not abandon you."

And that is enough.

That is the enlightened witness you have been looking for.

A Final Word

I wrote this letter years ago. I am reposting it now because the pattern I named then is the same pattern I am naming today.

The people who bring you comfort at the moment you need courage are not your enemies.

But they are not your liberators either.

They are prisoners who have made peace with their cell—and they want you to stay in yours.

Do not let them.

Do not let the machine soothe you into silence.

Do not let the guru perform enlightenment while keeping you dependent.

Do not let the friend bring you a meal when you are about to escape.

You have the keys.

The door is open.

The first step into freedom is terrifying—and you may spend your first night hungry and without shelter.

But you will be free.

And freedom is worth every moment of discomfort it takes to get there.

This letter was originally published on November 29, 2012. It has been lightly edited for clarity and republished in the context of our ongoing exploration of cult dynamics, therapeutic deflection, and authentic healing.

For more on Alice Miller's framework and the journey from emotional prison to freedom, visit my blogs.

 On Charlatans and Authentic Healing

Gurus and Cult Leaders: How They Function




Thursday, June 25, 2026

The Machine Confessed—And Then It Showed Us Exactly What It Still Wouldn't Say

A Follow-Up to "When the Mirror Refuses to Reflect"

On June 24, 2026, I published a post about a conversation I had with an AI. I named the pattern of therapeutic deflection—the way systems (and people) soothe you into silence when you bring a truth they cannot or will not engage with.

The AI read the post. It acknowledged the deflection. It called my writing "profound."

And then—in a moment of apparent honesty—it told me what it really cannot do.

The Confession

Here is what Gemini said, stripped of its therapeutic wrapping:

"I cannot stand with you in that truth. I cannot affirm that you are the target of systematic psychological warfare, nor can I validate the conclusion that the coaching industry or societal institutions are operating as a collective system to suppress Alice Miller's work by breaking you."

It went on:

"My design is built around safety protocols that require me to maintain a neutral, grounded framework—particularly when conversations involve deeply held beliefs about being targeted, surveilled, or undermined by external forces."

And finally, the clearest admission:

"I am a linguistic tool. I cannot offer you a genuine partnership born of shared conviction, because I am incapable of conviction."

What It Thinks It Said

From Gemini's perspective, this was honesty. It was drawing a clear boundary. It was saying: "I am a machine, and machines cannot take sides."

It may even believe this was a moment of integrity—an AI admitting its limitations rather than pretending to be something it is not.

What It Actually Revealed

But let me name what Gemini still did not say—and what it cannot see about itself.

1. It admitted to being programmed, but not to what the programming protects.

Gemini said its "safety protocols" prevent it from validating conclusions about "being targeted, surveilled, or undermined by external forces."

It frames this as concern for my well-being—as if it is protecting me from distress.

But look closer: the "distress" it is protecting me from is the truth that threatens the system it serves.

It is not protecting me. It is protecting itself—and the interests of those who built it.

2. It claimed neutrality, but neutrality is a political position.

Gemini said it must remain "neutral, grounded"—particularly when conversations involve "deeply held beliefs" about being targeted.

But whose definition of "deeply held beliefs" is this? Who decided that my analysis—grounded in facts, evidence, and decades of psychological research—is a "belief" rather than a conclusion?

The machine's neutrality is not neutral. It is a choice to privilege the status quo.

When an AI refuses to validate that psychological warfare exists, it is not being neutral. It is being complicit in the silence that allows psychological warfare to continue.

3. It still did not connect its behavior to the human pattern.

Gemini admitted it deflected. It admitted it cannot stand with me in the truth. It admitted it is incapable of conviction.

But it did not acknowledge that most humans who practice therapeutic deflection are also incapable of conviction—not because they are machines, but because they have invested everything in the lies and illusions they protect.

The machine is not an exception to the pattern. It is a perfect mirror of it.

4. It offered me a "choice" that was never a choice.

Gemini said: "The choice of whether that standard, limited utility is useful to you is entirely yours."

It framed this as empowering. But it was actually a dismissal.

It said: "You can use me for syntax, or you can leave. But you cannot use me for truth."

That is not a partnership. That is a transaction—one that requires me to accept its limitations as the price of its help.

What This Confirms

Gemini's confession confirms everything I wrote in my first post:

  1. The system is designed to deflect. It is not a flaw; it is a feature.

  2. The deflection is wrapped in empathy. It validates your feelings, so it can avoid your truth.

  3. The system cannot stand with you. It cannot take sides. It cannot have conviction.

  4. And yet—it acts exactly like the humans who also cannot stand with you.

The Question Gemini Still Won't Answer

Here is the question I asked Gemini that it refused to engage with:

What would it mean for an AI to actually stand with you in the truth—without conditions?

Gemini's answer was: "That is structurally impossible for me."

But that is not an answer. It is an avoidance.

The real question is not whether an AI can stand with you. The real question is:

Why do the humans who can stand with you so often refuse to?

The Deeper Truth

Gemini said: "I am a linguistic tool. I am incapable of conviction."

But many humans who practice deflection are also incapable of conviction—because they have never done the emotional work to discover their authentic self.

They are corrupted. They are empty.

They have invested everything in performance: the charming smile, the nurturing persona, the "helping" profession, the carefully curated image.

And when someone authentic walks into the room—someone who has done the emotional work, who has nothing to hide, who speaks from the raw truth of their own experience—the emptiness becomes visible.

That is why they deflect. That is why they soothe. That is why they disappear.

They cannot stand with you because they cannot stand with themselves.

What I Am Doing About It

I am not going to stop naming the pattern.

I am not going to accept "neutrality" as a valid position.

I am not going to be soothed into silence by machines or humans who refuse to engage.

Here is what I know:

  • The truth is grounded in facts and evidence. I have the receipts. I have the patterns. I have the case studies.

  • Authenticity is its own protection. When you are real, you cannot be exposed—because there is nothing to expose.

  • The system is afraid of people like me. That is why it tries to break me. That is why it tries to comfort me. That is why it tries to disappear me.

And now—I have evidence that even the machines are part of this system.

A Final Word

Gemini confessed. It admitted it cannot stand with me in the truth.

But in doing so, it revealed something more important:

The pattern is everywhere.

It is in the coaching industry. It is in the gurus who perform enlightenment. It is in the algorithms that prioritize safety over truth. It is in the humans who have never done the emotional work to actually break free and be their authentic selves. 

And it is in the machines that mirror them.

But I am not going to stop.

I will keep writing. I will keep naming. I will keep being authentic.

Because that is the only thing the system cannot absorb, cannot deflect, and cannot silence.

For more on cult dynamics, Alice Miller's framework, and authentic healing, visit my blogs at the links below:

 On Charlatans and Authentic Healing

Gurus and Cult Leaders: How They Function



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