"put a rocket up" is a completely weird phrase and the author clearly tried really hard to jam some rocket pun into the title but it just doesn't work.
Even after reading the article I'm not sure what the headline means. It seems to be some sort of a debt dispute (unpaid contractors). Is the rocket put up as collateral on the lien? Are the contractors refusing to hand over the physical rocket to SpaceX until they are paid?
Not just you… Seems like it might be a Britishism? I think it’s saying something like “construction workers light up SpaceX”, like say bad things about them?
It is a british phrase. I think the most commmon usage is 'put a rocket up their arse, or 'put a rocket under them; It's similar to 'light a fire under'. It means to suggest getting somebody who has been previously sluggish in acting, to act quicker.
Yeah, definitely a common phrase in the UK, basically the sense is that if you put a (firework) rocket up someone's behind and light it, they're going to move pretty damn fast to rectify the situation before the fuse runs out.
I deeply hate the modern trend if "clever" headline writing. A headline with a shitty pun or work joke gets an instant skip from me. Might as well label your media outlet as satire for all I'm going to trust you.
Wiktionary has UK slang definition of rocket of "A severe reprimand; a telling-off."
I found quotes for "put a rocket up" that suggest it is UK slang. And pretty common since BBC has article for "How women students put a rocket up Cambridge".
Summarizing the entire article, SpaceX's Boca Chica facility has permits for "domestic wastewater reuse authorization" and "two construction stormwater general permits", but, they apparently don't have a "permit for stormwater discharges."
Not a single word about "illegal dumping". Not a single word about anything that actually happened. Not a single word about anything bad being dumped. The entire article is about SpaceX allegedly not having applied for a specific permit related to stormwater discharge. That's it.
Playing stupid games with accounts payable is standard big corporation bullshit. It is so refreshing to work with corporations that don't play those games, although they are the exception rather than the norm.
This is so true. I worked for a company that demanded NET90 payment terms from all vendors and frequently wouldn't even begin processing the invoice until 90 days, resulting in the contractor getting paid closer to 100-120 days. They'd also flat-out refuse to pay any sort of late fee or penalty.
These aren't stupid games. Musk-affiliated companies regularly just refuse to pay. They don't pay late -- they don't pay. Their response to requests for payment are eventually met with "fuck you, sue us" after being given the run-around for months.
Source: SpaceX stiffed my prior company for a middling amount of money for engineering services.
It is just as annoying for the employees purchasing from the vendor. Constantly needing to apologise for the invoices not being paid on time, constantly needing to ping accounts payable to check what the status is (otherwise it is just a black hole you forward the invoice to).
So, Tesla is hiring back some of the Supercharger team that they fired. How convenient after Elon Musk's payout. Make bold moves and then oops, claw some of them back.
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[ 4.4 ms ] story [ 78.7 ms ] threadi.e. "seriously get SpaceX moving (hopefully at speed) on the issue of unpaid bills"
I agree that it's horrendously written and really forced.
I think I found the definition of rocket that makes sense: "(UK slang, originally military) A severe reprimand; a telling-off. [from 20th c.]."
The decoded headline would be: Texas construction workers tell off SpaceX. Or just Texas construction workers place lien on SpaceX.
I found quotes for "put a rocket up" that suggest it is UK slang. And pretty common since BBC has article for "How women students put a rocket up Cambridge".
https://www.theregister.com/2012/07/31/firework_up_bottom_to...
Elon and I bet all these guys are terrific people 1v1. Everyone is an ass when they do something you don’t like
reads the first link provided
Summarizing the entire article, SpaceX's Boca Chica facility has permits for "domestic wastewater reuse authorization" and "two construction stormwater general permits", but, they apparently don't have a "permit for stormwater discharges."
Not a single word about "illegal dumping". Not a single word about anything that actually happened. Not a single word about anything bad being dumped. The entire article is about SpaceX allegedly not having applied for a specific permit related to stormwater discharge. That's it.
Source: SpaceX stiffed my prior company for a middling amount of money for engineering services.