Elon Musk’s Bold Plan: Building a Mars Empire With His “Child Legion”
Elon Musk isn’t just building rockets to Mars. He’s building a biological empire—one child at a time. Hidden beneath the layers of SpaceX launches, Tesla innovations, and political firestorms lies Musk’s most intimate, audacious mission: to populate a multiplanetary future with his own offspring.
And, according to messages revealed by Ashley St. Clair and others close to the billionaire, this isn’t a metaphor. This is literal. Elon Musk, the richest man on Earth, wants to create a “child legion” to secure humanity’s survival on Mars—and he’s dead serious about it.At the center of this mission is a deeply personal, controversial, and intensely private agenda.
Musk has already fathered at least 14 publicly acknowledged children with four women, including pop star Grimes and Neuralink executive Shivon Zilis.But according to multiple sources, including former partners, text messages, and documents reviewed by close observers, the actual number of children Musk has fathered is likely much higher.
These revelations, once whispered behind closed doors, are now coming to light—and they paint a picture of a man whose quest for legacy is as expansive as his quest for Mars.In conversations with Ashley St. Clair, Musk referred to his children as a “legion”—an ancient Roman military term evoking armies thousands strong, used to conquer and spread influence.
In one jaw-dropping text message during her pregnancy, Musk told St. Clair:“To reach legion-level before the apocalypse, we will need to use surrogates.”Let that sink in. Not if the apocalypse happens—before it does. In Musk’s eyes, the world isn’t just changing—it’s collapsing.
He has spoken openly about population collapse, describing it as a bigger threat than climate change or nuclear war. To him, civilization isn’t dying because of war or famine, but because people aren’t having enough babies.And Musk believes he has a solution: create more humans. Smarter humans. His humans.
His vision is backed not only by ideology but by empire. SpaceX, his rocket company, exists to ferry civilization to Mars.Tesla and his other ventures generate the financial power to fund it. Neuralink, his brain-computer interface project, hints at a future where enhanced humans might thrive in space. But none of it matters, Musk argues, if people don’t exist to populate that future.To put it plainly: Musk sees himself as a founder of a Martian dynasty.
His children, seeded across different women, are not just heirs—they are building blocks. And he’s not waiting for society to catch up. He’s already assembling the “legion.”St. Clair, who refused to sign a nondisclosure agreement after giving birth to Musk’s child, described how he attempted to pull her into the inner sanctum of this project.
He wanted her to move to a gated compound in Austin, Texas, where several of his children and their mothers reportedly live. Musk himself comes and goes.The arrangement isn’t a family—it’s a structure. A system of control. An incubator for legacy.One woman who appears to embrace this vision is Shivon Zilis, a Yale graduate and Neuralink executive.
Musk offered her his sperm directly, and she now has four children with him. According to insiders, Zilis holds “special status.”She’s been photographed with Musk at elite events, from black-tie dinners with Jeff Bezos to diplomatic meetings with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
She’s not just a mother—she’s a strategic partner in Musk’s genetic mission.Zilis even told Musk’s biographer, Walter Isaacson, that Musk encouraged her to have children specifically because she was intelligent. In Musk’s worldview, the survival of civilization depends not only on having more babies—but having the right babies.
Educated, elite, genetically gifted.It’s a chilling echo of ideas often associated with eugenics, now rebranded under the cloak of “pronatalism,” a growing movement among tech elites who believe the greatest existential threat to the planet is the falling birthrate among intelligent people.
In one particularly disturbing instance, Musk told St. Clair that he had been approached in Austin by what he described as Japanese officials asking him to donate sperm to a high-profile woman—no romance, just genetics. He later claimed he agreed.
Elon Musk, global sperm donor, wasn’t a punchline—it was policy.This strange, dystopian project is protected by layers of legal silence. According to text messages and documents reviewed by journalists, Musk’s fixer Jared Birchall has pressured multiple women to sign nondisclosure agreements as a condition of receiving financial support. If they refuse or seek outside legal counsel, financial retribution follows.
Birchall told St. Clair bluntly: “Privacy and confidentiality is the top of the list in every aspect of [Musk’s] life… Benefits flow when people do good work.”Good work, in this context, meant delivering Musk’s children.
But not everyone stays silent. St. Clair says she was contacted by another woman Musk had recruited via his own platform, X, to have his child. She called it “harem drama,” a term that captured the eerie mix of personal desire and institutional structure. Musk wasn’t just expanding a family. He was orchestrating a reproductive machine, with himself at the center.
His estranged daughter, Vivian Wilson, born to his first wife Justine Musk, recently told Teen Vogue she doesn’t even know how many siblings she has. Vivian, who is transgender, has cut ties with Musk, reportedly due to his refusal to accept her identity. Justine Musk bore six children with Musk, one of whom died as an infant.Add in Grimes’ three, Zilis’ four, and St. Clair’s one—and the number continues to climb.
Even Grimes, one of Musk’s more public partners, has grown increasingly vocal. She recently begged Musk on X to help during a medical emergency involving one of their children, after he refused to engage. She also condemned his decision to parade their son, named X, on national television during an Oval Office appearance, calling it irresponsible and dangerous.
And yet, Musk continues. In speeches, interviews, and private messages, he’s made it clear that he sees birthrate as the number one threat to civilization. Speaking at an investment conference in Saudi Arabia, he said, “If you don’t make new humans, there’s no humanity… I do have a lot of kids, and I encourage others to have lots of kids.”When pressed further, he simply said: “You’ve got to walk the talk.”But who exactly is doing the walking—and who’s being walked on? That’s the question women like Ashley St.
Clair are now forcing into the public conversation.In a world where Elon Musk is shaping not only the future of energy and space but human reproduction itself, the question of consent, autonomy, and power becomes unavoidable.
This isn’t just about one man having a lot of kids. It’s about one of the most powerful people on Earth using his influence, money, and platforms to manufacture a new kind of human future, designed in his image, on his terms.
A future where love, choice, and individuality risk being replaced by metrics, meritocracies, and Mars.And as Musk himself warned in one of his texts: “To reach legion-level before the apocalypse, we will need to use surrogates.”The question now is: Who gets to say no? And how long before the rest of the world realizes that Musk’s most ambitious project might not be a spaceship—but a dynasty.