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Welcome to Starbase: Elon Musk to get his own city in Texas

Welcome to Starbase: Elon Musk to get his own city in Texas

The Age05-05-2025

While the vote will not give Musk free reign to adopt any regulations he wants, City officials will be able to do things such as shut down roads during rocket launches and build new housing for SpaceX staff.
The company has complained that it has been prevented from building enough housing for the hundreds of workers who want to live near the headquarters. A recent attempt to build more accommodation was rejected by local county officials.
In addition to the incorporation, locals elected Bobby Peden, a 36-year-old SpaceX employee who has worked at the company since 2013, as the town's new mayor alongside two city commissioners.
Little is known about the town's new leaders, who are all connected to SpaceX and ran unopposed with no campaigning.
An X account was created for the new city shortly after the results emerged. In its first post, it said: 'Becoming a city will help us continue building the best community possible for the men and women building the future of humanity's place in space.'
Musk is not the only tech billionaire looking to create his own new enclave. Marc Andreessen, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist known for inventing Netscape, and Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn, are among the backers of California Forever, a real estate company plotting a new city after buying tens of thousands of acres of land near San Francisco.
PayPal tycoon Peter Thiel was one of the first investors in Seasteading, a libertarian project aimed at building floating cities in the middle of the ocean. Crypto entrepreneurs have also tried to create their own utopia in Puerto Rico.
Victory for Musk's SpaceX was widely expected given that almost all of the 283 eligible voters in the area were employees and their families.
Despite this, the vote did face protests amid concerns SpaceX would be granted the power to shut down access to the town's public beach whenever it wanted. The bust of Musk was last month defaced by vandals.
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Local Rene Medrano, who grew up going to the Boca Chica beach, told the Texas Tribune: 'It's just such a disgrace on what's happening out here. There's a lot of upset community people who are seeing there's a great chance that we may lose this beach.'
Musk has recently relocated many of his companies and headquarters from California to Texas as he seeks out more favourable regulation in the Republican-run state. He recently bought a $US35 million ($54 million) compound in Texas, which is designed to house 11 of his children by different mothers.
County officials will canvass the results of the vote within the next fortnight before the official incorporation is declared by a judge. However, Remi Garza, the elections administrator for Cameron County, said: 'It's officially statistically impossible for the measure to fail. Cameron County is about to have a new city.'

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Andrew Miller: Trump & Musk remind us humans are predictable in moral vulnerability and propensity for hubris

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National Guard arrive in LA over immigration raid demos
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  • The Advertiser

National Guard arrive in LA over immigration raid demos

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Members of California's National Guard were seen on Sunday staging at the federal complex in downtown Los Angeles that includes the Metropolitan Detention Center, one of several sites of confrontations involving hundreds of people in the last two days. Trump has said he is deploying 2000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell the protests, which he called "a form of rebellion". The move came over the objections of Governor Gavin Newsome, marking the first time in decades that a state;s national guard was activated without a request from its governor, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Early on Sunday, the deployment was limited to a small area in downtown Los Angeles, with the rest of the city of four million people largely unaffected. Their arrival follows two days of relatively small protests that began on Friday in downtown Los Angeles before spreading on Saturday to Paramount, a heavily Latino city south of the city, and neighbouring Compton. As federal agents staged near a Home Depot in Paramount, demonstrators sought to block Border Patrol vehicles, with some hurling rocks and chunks of cement. In response, federal agents in riot gear unleashed tear gas, flash-bang explosives and pepper balls. Tensions were high after a series of sweeps by immigration authorities the previous day, as the week-long tally of immigrant arrests in the city climbed past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. On Sunday morning, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the National Guard would "keep peace and allow people to be able to protest but also to keep law and order". The troops included members of the 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, according to a social media post from the Department of Defense that showed dozens of National Guard members with long guns and an armoured vehicle. 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Early on Sunday, the deployment was limited to a small area in downtown Los Angeles, with the rest of the city of four million people largely unaffected. Their arrival follows two days of relatively small protests that began on Friday in downtown Los Angeles before spreading on Saturday to Paramount, a heavily Latino city south of the city, and neighbouring Compton. As federal agents staged near a Home Depot in Paramount, demonstrators sought to block Border Patrol vehicles, with some hurling rocks and chunks of cement. In response, federal agents in riot gear unleashed tear gas, flash-bang explosives and pepper balls. Tensions were high after a series of sweeps by immigration authorities the previous day, as the week-long tally of immigrant arrests in the city climbed past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. 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National Guard arrive in LA over immigration raid demos
National Guard arrive in LA over immigration raid demos

West Australian

time3 hours ago

  • West Australian

National Guard arrive in LA over immigration raid demos

National Guard troops have begun arriving in Los Angeles on orders from US President Donald Trump, in response to clashes in recent days between federal immigration authorities and protesters seeking to block them from carrying out deportations. Members of California's National Guard were seen on Sunday staging at the federal complex in downtown Los Angeles that includes the Metropolitan Detention Center, one of several sites of confrontations involving hundreds of people in the last two days. Trump has said he is deploying 2000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell the protests, which he called "a form of rebellion". The move came over the objections of Governor Gavin Newsome, marking the first time in decades that a state;s national guard was activated without a request from its governor, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Early on Sunday, the deployment was limited to a small area in downtown Los Angeles, with the rest of the city of four million people largely unaffected. Their arrival follows two days of relatively small protests that began on Friday in downtown Los Angeles before spreading on Saturday to Paramount, a heavily Latino city south of the city, and neighbouring Compton. As federal agents staged near a Home Depot in Paramount, demonstrators sought to block Border Patrol vehicles, with some hurling rocks and chunks of cement. In response, federal agents in riot gear unleashed tear gas, flash-bang explosives and pepper balls. Tensions were high after a series of sweeps by immigration authorities the previous day, as the week-long tally of immigrant arrests in the city climbed past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. On Sunday morning, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the National Guard would "keep peace and allow people to be able to protest but also to keep law and order". The troops included members of the 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, according to a social media post from the Department of Defense that showed dozens of National Guard members with long guns and an armoured vehicle. In a signal of the administration's aggressive approach, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also threatened to deploy active-duty Marines "if violence continues" in the region. Newsom, a Democrat, described Trump's decision to call in the National Guard as a "provocative show of force" that would only escalate tensions, adding that Hegseth's threat to deploy Marines on US soil was "deranged behaviour". Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders said the order by Trump reflected "a president moving this country rapidly into authoritarianism" and "usurping the powers of the United States Congress". Several Republicans, meanwhile, have voiced support for the involvement of the National Guard. Among them was Wisconsin Republican Senator Ron Johnson, who stopped short of backing Hegseth's threat to send in active-duty military personnel. "My guess is the National Guard ought to take care of the situation," Johnson said.

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