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Tuesday
Yesterday I compared Donald Trump to Raskolnikov in Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment but noted a dramatic contrast: because Dostoevsky’s axe-murdering protagonist has a complex inner life, his punishment ultimately originates within himself. Unable to withstand the horror at his act, he confesses to his crime and takes his punishment.
Trump, because he is a sociopath who appears to have no internal complexity, crimes without remorse. To be sure, I think he lives a miserable life as a result, but this is of scant consolation to his victims.
I find myself wondering if the same can be said of his eminence grise Elon Musk. (An eminence grise is a person who exercises power or influence in a certain sphere without holding an official position.) Musk is one who has read widely (if articles about him are to be believed) and who at times has had intelligent things to say. Yet his reading hasn’t prevented him from selling his soul for political power, and it is this issue that I take on today.
One of the works that Musk has mentioned frequently is Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. A 2024 article in Times Now contends that Tolkien’s themes of “rich storytelling, complex characters, and themes of courage and perseverance…have resonated with Musk throughout his life.”
It so happens that Lord of the Rings was the most important book of my own childhood and I certainly can see how it bolsters one up. In my case, I was a shy, short, and bookish child who did not play football (almost a sin for a boy growing up in 1950s rural Tennessee) so to see short characters like Frodo and Gimli Son of Gloin triumph over adversity was inspirational. If it did the same for Musk, I’m happy for him.
Unfortunately, some of the problematic aspects of Tolkien’s fantasy epic are showing up in Musk’s current view of the world. Tolkien’s longing for a pastoral, class-based society meant that he turned in horror from an industrialized world in which workers demand their rights. While the goblins and orcs may stand in for Nazis in thrall to Hitler (Sauron) and Bolsheviks in thrall to Stalin (Saruman), they are also a threat in their own right. The elites of Tolkien’s world—the Men of the West and the Elven aristocracy—regard the orcs as vermin, to be exterminated wholesale. Musk, who grew up white and rich in apartheid South Africa, would have felt right at home in this vision. In his reading of the text, he may have substituted Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress for the orcs.
I can see Musk preferring the peaceful hierarchy that we see in the shire, where the Bagginses and Tooks are held in special regard while the servant class—Gaffer Gamgee and his son Samwise—know their place. In this way, he sees eye to eye with Trump, who after all has always been reluctant to pay anyone who ever worked for him. Together they are going after trade unions, the working class, and government workers.
But even if Musk’s class politics align with Tolkien’s (with Tolkien having the excuse of belonging to an earlier age), he is clearly missing Tolkien’s major lesson, which is that power corrupts. Musk may like to think of himself as a heroic Frodo, but he’s behaving much more like Gollum. Whatever contributions that Musk has made to the world are being undone by his craving for power. As he seeks it, he is hollowed out as Gollum has been hollowed out. Here is the ring-obsessed figure as he tracks Frodo and Sam in The Two Towers:
He was getting lower now and the hisses became sharper and clearer. “Where iss it, where iss it: my Precious, my Precious? It’s ours, it is, and we wants it. The thieves, the thieves, the filthy little thieves. Where are they with my Precious? Curse them! We hates them.”
When Gollum finally gains possession of the ring, he cavorts around like Musk on the stage with Trump:
But Gollum, dancing like a mad thing, held aloft the ring, a finger still thrust within its circle. It shone now as if verily it was wrought of living fire.
‘Precious, precious, precious!’ Gollum cried. ‘My Precious! O my Precious!’
While Musk would disavow any similarity to Gollum, he might acknowledge some kinship with Saruman, the onetime good wizard who has gone over to the dark side. The “two towers” of the second book are Sauron and Saruman, and Musk might see himself and Trump in an unstable but necessary alliance that allows them to rule the world together. Like Saruman, he might even regard Sauron as the junior partner.
Musk, however, lacks Trump’s power base and is, to borrow from T.S. Eliot’s “Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” no leading player but rather someone in attendance:
No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be;
Am an attendant lord, one that will do
To swell a progress, start a scene or two,
Advise the prince; no doubt, an easy tool,
Deferential, glad to be of use,
Politic, cautious, and meticulous;
Full of high sentence, but a bit obtuse;
At times, indeed, almost ridiculous—
Almost, at times, the Fool.
When it comes down to it, Musk is not Saruman but Wormtongue, the wizard’s lickspittle attendant. In short, a fool. He just doesn’t know it yet.