f.Elon Musk shocks the world: spends £10 million to build a “paradise” for stray animals, sending social media into a frenzy.f

This time, Elon Musk broke the IoT barrier in search of something much softer and warmer.
In a surprise encounter that flooded social media with hearts and tears, the billionaire entrepreneur revealed plans to invest £10 million (about $12.8 million) to build a vast sanctuary city for stray cats and dogs: a self-sufficient paradise designed to shelter, heal, and resettle thousands of animals each year.

No electric cars. No satellites. Just compassion and a promise: “Technology must serve life, not just profit. This is a project for creatures that cannot speak for themselves.”
In the community, hashtags like #MüskAnimalParadise, #ForeverHomes, and #ElonRescues went viral. But behind the viral news was a vision much larger than compassion—a sign that empathy, compassion, and science could finally come together for the Earth’s most voiceless generations.
Minutes later, he followed up with another post about the Elo Mšsk Animal Preservation Project (EMASP)—a network of eco-friendly shelters, veterinary research centers, and animal adoption communities powered entirely by renewable energy.
According to Mšsk, the first “paradise camps” would be established outside Aštē, Texas, near the Starbase facilities.
Within an hour, the tweet had reached 30 million views. By the end of October, headlines were “From Rockets to Rescue: Musk’s New Mission Has a Wagging Tail.”

Msk describes the project as “a combination of sustainability, robotics, and a love of nature.”
It will include:
Solar-powered living domes that house more than 5,000 rescued animals.
Veterinary pods that use AI to diagnose and treat common ailments.
An “Eternal Home” adoption village where visitors can meet and adopt animals in peaceful, park-like gardens.
A renewable energy kitchen that can convert organic waste into sustainable pet food.

An on-site lodge for volunteers and veterinarians, built from recycled Tesla battery modules.
Muzk calls it “a prototype for compassionate infrastructure.”

“We’ve built cities for profit, built land for expansion, built machines for convenience. It’s time to build something entirely for children.”

