Some of the most exclusive seats at President Donald Trump’s inauguration were reserved for powerful tech CEOs who also are among the world’s richest men.
Getting humans to Mars has long been an obsession for SpaceX CEO Elon Musk. During his inaugural address, President Donald Trump promised he would “pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts who plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars.
The world’s richest man, Elon Musk, is overseeing a new Department of Government Efficiency. Billionaires or mega-millionaires are lined up to run the treasury, commerce, interior and education departments, NASA and the Small Business Administration, and fill key foreign posts.
Doug Burgum The North Dakota governor (estimated ... given that billionaires like Musk and Amazon chief Jeff Bezos are now competing in a space sector that was once the province of the federal ...
While campaigning in August, Donald Trump‘s VP pick, then-Senator JD Vance (R-OH), told Face the Nation that big tech needs to be broken up. As the new U.S. Vice President, Vance returned Sunday to Face the Nation where host Margaret Brennan reminded him of his comment and asked if his opinion has changed after Big Tech CEOs — Meta’s Mark Zuckerburg,
Mark Zuckerberg 'caught' liking Jeff Bezos' partner Lauren Sanchez's photo after 'lusting' after her at Trump inauguration Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez have been engaged since 2023, but with a ...
Trump has embraced the ultra wealthy as well as tariffs and other policies that could stoke the inflation he criticized as a candidate.
Lauren is engaged to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos but it would seem that he is revelling in the attention that Lauren is bringing. While Zuckerberg was caught on camera having a sneaky ogle of Lauren ...
Claims that Amazon founder and billionaire Jeff Bezos once said that he tells his employees to "wake up terrified every morning" circulated online in late 2024. Bezos did indeed once say that he ...
When North Dakota’s petroleum association was going to hold a banquet honoring top fracking executives last year, it turned to Gov. Doug Burgum. The two-term
President Donald Trump’s brash populism has always involved incongruence: the billionaire businessman-politician stirring the passions of millions who, regardless of the U.S. economy’s trajectory, could never afford to live in his Manhattan skyscraper or visit his club in south Florida.
This essay is featured in our Winter 2025 issue, Trump’s Return. Subscribe now to get a copy.