He's the richest man on the planet with more billions than NASA spent on Apollo and is bragging about being the first trillionaire.
plus he benefits from 70 years of research and developments since Apollo.
He seems to be following the Russian path. Spectacular displays for the press and his fans rather than any real development.
How much effort was put in to catching that bit of a rocket?
Why?
Any argument that starts with "He's the richest man on the planet'" isn't worth parsing.
SpaceX is a private company currently valued at US$350 billion. Musk owns ~42% of the shares, which makes his portion 'worth' $147 billion. But this isn't like money in the bank or a fixed asset. If he sells too many of those shares he loses control of the company, and if things at SpaceX don't go well they could be worth nothing.
Musk founded SpaceX in 2002. By 2008 he had put all the money he had into it. 3 rockets had failed to launch and If next one also failed the company faced bankruptcy. Luckily for him the 4th
Falcon 1 launch was successful, making it the first ever privately developed fully liquid-fueled launch vehicle to successfully reach orbit.
With the Falcon 1 making SpaceX viable, Musk then set about reducing the cost of delivering payloads to orbit by making parts of the rocket reusable. The Falcon 9 reduced launch costs from $50 million to $15 million. This made their services attractive to NASA, who previously had relied mostly on the United Launch Alliance (a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin). SpaceX has reduced NASA's costs to around 10% of the ULA's, making SpaceX their favorate provider and a big win for the taxpayer!
But why did he do this? Did he set out to become rich and famous, or was there some other motivation? In 2001 Musk donated $5,000 to the
Mars Society. Then he joined their board of directors and gave another $100,000. But he wanted to do more than just mess around with habitats in the desert, he wanted to
actually colonize Mars! So he left the Mars Society and started SpaceX in 2002. In order to do achive his goal he would need rockets that were much cheaper to launch, with faster turnaround and bigger payloads.
This is why SpaceX is putting so much effort into 'catching that bit a rocket'. Not to show off, but because something like this will be needed for missions to Mars. They are simply trying to find a viable method of reusing larger rockets.
I think colonizing Mars is a silly idea, and I certainly wouldn't waste any of my own finances (not even $5,000) on such a project. But so long as it has spinoffs I don't mind. Musk developed
Starlink to provide cheaper high-speed internet to remote areas. This is SpaceX's main source of income and reason for most of their launches now. Friends of mine who live in a rural area recently got Starlink because it was cheaper, faster and more reliable than what the local tecommunications provider was offering. They are 'fans' because it's doing the job for them - nothing more.
It should be obvious by now that Musk is
not motivated by money or fame. Whether it be colonizing Mars, improving communications, getting off fossils fuels or making machines smarter, he always has some vision of a better future through technological advances. If any of us are 'fans' it's because we share those visions. You may disagree on whether his goals are worthwhile, but to suggest that he only does it for 'the press and his fans' rather than any real development is plainly wrong.
So the real question is - why do you do it? Why make up stuff about Musk 'bragging about being the first trillionaire'? Why dismiss everything he and the hard-working people at SpaceX have done as 'benefiting from 70 years of research and developments'? Is it jealousy, wounded pride, partisanship, or just the usual superiority complex of a so-called 'skeptic'?