Elon Musk wants to go to Mars, build an AI brain, and create a hyperloop. But according to a bombshell report from the Wall Street Journal, one of his boldest ambitions might be something much closer to home — literally.

He’s trying to build a baby “legion.” On purpose.
Yes, you read that right. The world’s richest man is not just having kids — he’s allegedly building a dynastic bloodline designed to outlive him, and possibly, outthink us all.

The WSJ Bombshell: A “Deliberate Legacy Strategy”
The Wall Street Journal’s in-depth feature dives into Musk’s long-rumored obsession with human reproduction. But this isn’t just about his 11 children (with at least 3 different mothers). This is about what those children represent.
According to WSJ sources close to Musk:
He sees population collapse as an existential threat to humanity.
He believes he must personally contribute to “repopulating the planet with smart, capable people.”
He’s already had children with executives from his own companies (like Neuralink’s Shivon Zilis), and more may be on the way.
This is no accident. The article claims Musk has told friends he’s “doing his part” to fight what he calls a global fertility crisis. And the more you read, the more it starts sounding like… a real-life sci-fi plot.
“Smart Genes” and Tech-Enhanced Parenting?
What makes this even wilder is the philosophy behind Musk’s actions. The WSJ article outlines a disturbing but fascinating idea: that Musk sees his children as not only heirs — but as the next generation of elite thinkers and doers.

He’s reportedly interested in:
The genetic potential of high-IQ pairings.
Leveraging tech (like Neuralink) to eventually augment future generations.
Creating “legacy clusters” of Musk descendants across industries and continents.
One source claimed Musk jokingly compared his parenting mission to Genghis Khan, who fathered hundreds of descendants across Asia. Only now, it’s in Teslas and tech labs instead of empires and horses.
The Public Reaction: Confused, Concerned… and Kinda Fascinated
When news of the article hit X (formerly Twitter), the reaction was immediate — and explosive.
“Elon Musk thinks he’s the protagonist in a dystopian Netflix series.”
“This man is literally building a startup of humans.”
“Bro is speedrunning eugenics and calling it ‘legacy.’”
But others defended him, pointing to global population decline and the fact that, well, he can afford the kids — emotionally, financially, and genetically (in his own mind, at least).
Ethics? Privacy? Not in Elon’s Universe.
The WSJ also raises questions about consent, power dynamics, and the potential for future conflict among Musk’s children. How do you co-parent across multiple continents, careers, and belief systems? What happens when the “Musk kids” grow up and want to define their own identities — separate from the machine?
This isn’t just one rich guy having lots of kids. This is a man with god-tier resources trying to engineer the future — and not everyone’s comfortable with that.
Final Thought: Is This the Start of the Musk Dynasty?
Whether you find it fascinating or terrifying, one thing is clear:
Elon Musk’s legacy project isn’t just electric cars or Mars rockets.
It might be his own bloodline.
And according to the WSJ, that project is already well underway — one child, one Neuralink connection, and one “elite pairing” at a time.
News
When the Rice Burned
The first time the rice burned, no one said anything. It was a Tuesday evening, the kind that arrives quietly…
The Things We Don’t Inherit
When her grandmother died, Mai expected to inherit jewelry. Gold bracelets, perhaps. A pair of jade earrings. Something solid and…
The Silence Between Us
On the night her mother stopped speaking, the rain would not stop either. It began in the late afternoon—thin, almost…
The Weight of the House
When Linh was a child, she believed that houses had hearts.Not the wooden beams or the tiled roofs or the…
The Reshaping of a Family
I used to think that divorce was the end of a story.A broken frame. A torn photograph. A word whispered…
The Silence That Hurt Us
I used to think the worst kind of family drama was shouting.Doors slamming. Plates breaking. Neighbors pretending not to listen…
End of content
No more pages to load






