Often, we hear from people who have journeyed to space that they experience feeling overcome by a greater sense of sensitivity and deeper understanding of humanity while contemplating the beauty of the Earth from afar. It appears space didn’t exactly have that effect on Jeff Bezos.
At a news conference on Tuesday after his trip some 60 miles into the sky aboard a rocket built by his private space company, Bezos displayed quite the tin ear when discussing how he was able to pay for the fulfillment of his childhood dream.
“I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer because you guys paid for all of this,” the richest man on the planet said of his 11-minute joy ride.
“Seriously, for every Amazon customer out there and every Amazon employee, thank you from the bottom of my heart very much. It’s very appreciated,” he continued.
“I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer because you guys paid for all this,” Jeff Bezos says on the Blue Origin flight. pic.twitter.com/uTeJhtPLwI
— MSNBC (@MSNBC) July 20, 2021
While his in-person audience laughed, his remarks were met with jeers online. Talking heads ripped Bezos’ flippant remarks about his notoriously mistreated employees funding the trip as “supervillainesque.”
There are a few reasons why Bezos’ remarks rubbed so many people — including me — the wrong way.
Bezos’s entire venture was controversial to begin with. So much of the billionaire space race entails unfathomably wealthy titans of industry spitballing about how to escape the planet instead of tackling the urgent and irreversible threats to the people living on it.
While Bezos has framed his rocket company, Blue Origin, as driven by a broader mission of interplanetary living, the current operation he’s kicking off is the business of suborbital space tourism — a new and costly leisure activity that will almost exclusively be available to the obscenely rich. For Tuesday’s flight, Bezos had initially auctioned off one seat for $28 million; that person had a “scheduling conflict” and was then replaced by the 18-year-old son of a CEO of a private equity firm.









