But that's no obstacle for a guy who can build a submarine to rescue the boys in the cave, run Twitter on one-third of its workforce, or bring the stranded Starliner astronauts home any time after the political obstacle is removed.i actually think it’s pretty difficult to straighten out steel once it’s bent. you can get it roughly straight but not like it was when it was rolled out of the steel mill.
Possibly because it's spelled "wiener".
Thats wierd . . .Possibly because it's spelled "wiener".
Grok is an LLM AI - so not directly equivalent to doing a google search.
The spread of misinformation online is a complex issue, and pinpointing a single individual as the "biggest spreader" can be subjective and contentious. However, recent reports have highlighted that Elon Musk has been identified as a significant spreader of misinformation on X (formerly Twitter) since he acquired the platform2. His posts, especially related to political events, elections, health issues like COVID-19, and conspiracy theories, have been criticized for promoting or endorsing misinformation2.
It's important to note that misinformation can come from various sources, including individuals, bots, and organizations, and its impact can vary based on the reach and influence of the source. The definition of misinformation is also somewhat subjective and often depends on the ideological stance of the reader.
Elon Musk
@elonmusk
True
Quote
Rothmus
@Rothmus
Bernie Sanders is a liar, a retard, and a parasite.
Elon Musk’s X has been hit by three waves of outages since this morning, which the billionaire claims was due to a cyberattack.
...
Musk posted on X that he believes “a large, coordinated group and/or a country is involved,” though the source of motivation behind the attack wasn’t confirmed.
Musk has a history of blaming cyberattacks for technical snafus. When his conversation with Donald Trump on X started 42 minutes late in August 2024, he said there was a “probability” of an attack.
I was at a party over the weekend where one of the hosts had met someone who worked at Twitter headquarters when Elon Musk took over. He said she showed him pictures of all the garbage and gunk that had piled up at the office because Musk had fired all the janitors.As the article states, by "massive cyberattacks" he, of course, means "I have no ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ clue how to run a business, and I fired everyone in charge of properly running my infrastructure and now something is broke and we don't know how to fix it".
I wonder what he ◊◊◊◊◊◊ up this time.