Comment by bagful

1 year ago

A privately-held strategic advantage?

Like all other US defense companies, why not? Do you think US Navy produces their own ships?

  • The distinction here is that ships are built by nongovernmental private enterprises, whilst Starlink is operated by a nongovernmental private enterprise. With a somewhat volatile executive.

    Which isn't unprecedented. But it's also far from the equivalence your comment suggests.

  • Note that, historically, the US Navy had plenty of its own shipyards, and did produce many of its own ships.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:United_States_Navy_sh...

    But that's mostly been "optimized away" in more-recent times, in the name of Capitalism and Campaign Donations.

    • >did produce many of its own ships.

      Problem is that we're talking about how it works currently. US also used to send its own specifically owned spacecrafts into space. But it hasn't in ages.

Plenty of US strategic advantages are privately held or otherwise very dependent on the private sector. It's fine because the company can't really leave the US.

At that level of strategic usefulness ownership stops mattering if shit hits the fan. It'll simply get commandeered.

Offloading the risk on private players, reduces the amount of government investment required, and shields them from any criticism, should the project fail.

Also, if it is that strategically important, the government can just buy SpaceX.