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Elon Musk using his social platform to amplify his views in unprecedented ways

ā€˜Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town squareā€™
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FILE - Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk speaks at the SATELLITE Conference and Exhibition in Washington, March 9, 2020. The British government on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024, has called on Musk to act responsibly after one of the worldā€™s richest men used his social media platform to unleash a barrage of posts that risked inflaming the violent unrest gripping the country. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

As Xā€™s owner and most followed user, Elon Musk has increasingly used the social media platform as a microphone to amplify his political views and, lately, those of right-wing figures heā€™s aligned with. There are few modern parallels to his antics, but then again there are few modern parallels to Elon Musk himself.

Of course, none of this should come as a surprise.

Back in 2022 when he was trying to buy Twitter, Musk said he was doing so because it wasnā€™t living up to its potential as a ā€œplatform for free speech.ā€ Protecting free speech ā€” not money ā€” was his motivation because, as he put it, ā€œhaving a public platform that is maximally trusted and broadly inclusive is extremely important to the future of civilization.ā€

Musk often ruminates on the future of civilization. For one, he appears fixated on a coming ā€œ ,ā€ threatening to wipe out humanity. And he joined prominent scientists and tech leaders last year in doing the same. Musk has framed threats to free speech as yet another existential crisis looming over the world. And he is going to try his best to save it.

ā€œFree speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated,ā€ Musk said in an April 2022 post, adding to highlight the statement.

Two years on, the platform ā€” now called X ā€” has indeed become a haven for the type of free speech Musk has come to champion. In the U.S., heā€™s spread memes ā€” and sometimes misinformation ā€” about illegal immigration, alleged election fraud and transgender policies, and he formally endorsed former President Donald Trumpā€™s presidential bid this summer.

In May 2023, he co-hosted Florida Gov. Ron DeSantisā€™ official presidential bid announcement. That turned out to be marred by technical glitches but it underscored Muskā€™s desire to turn X into a ā€œdigital town square.ā€ After the event was marred by technical difficulties, Musk extended an open invitation to any other presidential candidate who wants to do one.

Trump took him up on it, agreeing to an interview with the billionaire Tesla CEO on Monday evening. The conversation started with with people unable to join in and began some 42 minutes late.

ā€œIā€™ve not been very political before,ā€ Musk said during his conversation with Trump.

Overseas ā€” where most X users live ā€” heā€™s feuded with top officials in , , the European Union and over the balance between free speech and the spread of harmful misinformation. And he in his native South Africa of ā€œopenly pushing for genocide of white people.ā€

ā€œElon Musk is a master of the media and controls one of the worldā€™s largest microphones. Musk understands the power of social media in shaping a political narrative,ā€ said Emarketer analyst Jasmine Enberg.

ā€œThe concern is that as he pushes his own political agenda, X could suppress viewpoints that oppose Muskā€™s own, either intentionally or by nature of the platform becoming more partisan. That could turn off users who feel marginalized on the platform, and disillusion some who may have earlier bought into his free speech mantra.ā€

Muskā€™s political shift playing out on X comes as other social media platforms, notably Metaā€™s Facebook and Instagram, are shying away from politics. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has never endorsed a presidential candidate ā€” and in February, the worldā€™s largest social media company announced it to people who donā€™t already follow such accounts.

Lately, Zuckerberg appears to contrast Musk in other ways too. While as recently as January, the Facebook founder was testifying before Congress about the harm his platform has caused children, he seemed to have embraced a more stylish look that includes gold chains, longer curls and a beaming confidence coupled with slightly self-deprecating humor that seems to embrace his eccentricities.

On July 4, for instance, he posted a video of himself riding an electric surfboard, wearing a tuxedo and holding a can of beer in one hand and an American flag in the other. The online response was far more positive than to a 2021 surfing photo, where heā€™s seen slathered in so much sunscreen it looks like he is wearing a white mask.

Musk, meanwhile, is veering from cool nerd territory into what , the elder stateswoman of tech journalism, recently called ā€œthe Howard Hughes portionā€ of an inevitable decline. Heā€™s sparring with those who disagree with him ā€” be they foreign governments or people infected by what he calls the ā€œwoke mind virus.ā€

Last week, the to act more responsibly after the tech billionaire used X to unleash a barrage of posts that risk inflaming violent unrest gripping the country.

Justice Minister Heidi Alexander made the comments after Musk posted a comment saying that ā€œCivil war is inevitableā€ in the U.K. Musk later doubled down, highlighting complaints that the British criminal justice system treats Muslims more leniently than far-right activists and comparing Britainā€™s crackdown on social media users to the Soviet Union.

Officials at X did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Of course, some of Muskā€™s current battles over free speech are similar to those that the previous Twitter administration was fighting in repressive regimes that have, at times, restricted or blocked access to the platform to suppress dissent. In Venezuela, for instance, President NicolĆ”s on access to X in the country last week ā€” the latest in a series of efforts by his government to try to suppress information sharing among people voicing doubts about his claim to victory in the . Maduro accused X of being used by his opponents to create political unrest, and gave the company 10 days to ā€œpresent their documents,ā€ but he gave no additional details.

Muskā€™s antics are unlike any other Big Tech leader, and while it may be off-putting to a segment of his X user base, it could also attract eyeballs to his platform. Could this all be part of a broader plan? After all, despite publicly criticizing Muskā€™s antics, those on .

ā€œX has remained surprisingly resilient throughout the recent controversy,ā€ Enberg said. ā€œThatā€™s in no small part due to consumer fascination with conspiracy theories and Elon Musk himself.ā€





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