In a move that has stunned political leaders, medical experts, and the entire tech industry, Elon Musk has officially opened the nation’s first fully free hospital dedicated entirely to serving America’s homeless population. The facility — located in downtown Los Angeles — is being described by insiders as the most ambitious humanitarian project Musk has ever funded, surpassing even his global clean-water and disaster-relief initiatives.

Tỷ phú Elon Musk chỉ trích EU "nên bị giải thể"

According to representatives from the Musk Foundation, the hospital will operate with zero billingzero insurance requirements, and zero identification barriers, ensuring that anyone experiencing homelessness can walk through its doors and receive immediate, comprehensive medical care. The facility includes emergency services, mental-health treatment, addiction recovery programs, maternity care, and long-term rehabilitation units — all staffed by volunteer physicians and nurses alongside full-time medical personnel funded through Musk’s private endowment.

Công ty của Elon Musk bị EU phạt nặng

Witnesses at the opening ceremony say Musk grew emotional as he addressed the crowd, explaining that the idea began after he realized how often medical crises push people deeper into poverty. “We talk about innovation, progress, and the future,” he said. “But a society that can send rockets into space should not allow its people to suffer without basic care. This is the legacy I want to leave behind.”

Tỷ phú Elon Musk chỉ rõ: Muốn giàu nhanh, người nghèo phải biết “vay mượn”  và làm thêm 2 việc này

City officials confirm that the hospital could dramatically reduce emergency-room overflow across Los Angeles, where homelessness has reached crisis levels in recent years. Early community response has been overwhelmingly positive, with hundreds gathering outside the hospital on opening day to express gratitude and share personal stories of medical struggles faced on the streets.

Musk’s team says this is only the beginning. Plans are already in development for similar facilities in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Atlanta — signaling what could become one of the most significant humanitarian expansions in modern U.S. history.