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Musk just dropped a candid take on his DOGE stint – calling it "somewhat successful" and flat-out saying he wouldn't sign up for round two. That's a pretty lukewarm review coming from someone who usually goes all-in on his projects.
What's interesting here isn't just the admission itself, but the timing. When a figure this influential in both tech and crypto circles publicly distances himself from a government efficiency initiative, it raises eyebrows. Was the bureaucratic maze too thick to navigate? Did the political constraints clash with his move-fast-break-things approach?
For those watching the intersection of innovation and regulation, this matters. Musk's involvement in any project – whether it's rockets, cars, or restructuring government departments – tends to move markets and shape narratives. His retreat signals something about the limits of disruption when it collides with established systems.
The "wouldn't do it again" part hits different too. That's not hedging – that's a door slamming shut. Makes you wonder what went down behind the scenes that we're not seeing.