Tag: Elon Musk

  • Elon Musk calls hashtags ‘esthetic nightmare,’ removes them from ads

    Elon Musk calls hashtags ‘esthetic nightmare,’ removes them from ads

    Hashtags will no longer be allowed in paid advertisements on X (formerly known as Twitter), Elon Musk said on Thursday.

    In an early Thursday post, Musk labeled hashtags in ads as an “esthetic nightmare” and declared they would be banned, continuing his attempts to transform the platform since acquiring it in 2022.

    Musk has previously voiced his disapproval of hashtags in December 2024, he encouraged users to refrain from using them, asserting that the platform had evolved beyond the necessity of manual tagging. At that time, he mentioned that features like Grok, an AI chatbot from his company xAI, could now categorize and recommend content without relying on hashtags.

    The new ruling pertains exclusively to paid advertisements. Regular users will still retain the ability to utilize hashtags in their posts. However, advertisers must now exclude hashtags from their promotional content.

    Since its introduction in 2007, the hashtag has been an essential element on the platform, enabling users to organize discussions and monitor trends. Over time, it has become a fundamental aspect of digital marketing, frequently employed by advertisers to enhance visibility and engagement.

    Musk’s approach appears to be driven by a shift in how content is discovered on the platform. Under his direction, X is moving away from user-initiated tagging toward algorithm-driven content discovery. This includes advancing posts through automated systems instead of leaning on trending hashtags.

    It is still uncertain how the ban on hashtags in advertisements will affect advertisers. Some marketing experts have leveraged them to connect with larger audiences, particularly during events or trending discussions. 

    The decision is part of a broader series of changes Musk has implemented as part of the rebranding of X. Since taking control, he has significantly restructured integral components of the platform’s identity and functionality, steering it away from its previous form towards a more AI-integrated and visually cohesive product.

  • SpaceX Starship explodes on Texas launch pad

    SpaceX Starship explodes on Texas launch pad

    A SpaceX Starship rocket exploded during a routine ground test in Texas late Wednesday, the company said, in the latest setback to billionaire Elon Musk’s dream of sending humans to Mars.

    The explosion — which sent a towering fireball into the air — happened at the Starbase launch facility at about 11:00 pm (0400 GMT Thursday), SpaceX and law enforcement officials said.

    As the company prepared for a static fire test, “a sudden energetic event resulted in the complete loss of Starship and damage to the immediate area surrounding the stand,” it said Thursday, updating its initial statement.

    “The explosion ignited several fires at the test site which remains clear of personnel,” it said.

    “As is the case before any test, a safety zone was established around the test site and was maintained throughout the operation. There are no reported injuries, and all personnel are safe and accounted for.”

    During a static fire test, part of the procedures preceding a launch, the Starship’s first-stage Super Heavy booster would be anchored to the ground to prevent it from lifting off during the test-firing.

    Starbase, on the south Texas coast near the border with Mexico, is the headquarters for Musk’s space project. The company was preparing for the 10th test flight of Starship.

    “Initial analysis indicates the potential failure of a pressurized tank known as a COPV, or composite overwrapped pressure vessel, containing gaseous nitrogen in Starship’s nosecone area, but the full data review is ongoing,” SpaceX said.

    Musk appeared to downplay the incident on Thursday.

    “Just a scratch,” he posted on his social media platform X.

    – Mega-rocket –

    Standing 403 feet (123 meters) tall, Starship is the world’s largest and most powerful rocket and is central to Musk’s long-term vision of building a long-term colony on Mars.

    The Starship is billed as a fully reusable rocket with a payload capacity of up to 150 metric tons.

    The latest setback follows the explosion of a prototype Starship over the Indian Ocean in late May.

    That day, the biggest and most powerful launch vehicle ever built had lifted off from the Starbase facility, but the Super Heavy booster blew up instead of executing its planned splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico.

    The previous two outings also ended poorly, with the upper stage disintegrating over the Caribbean.

    However, the failures will likely do little to dent Musk’s spacefaring ambitions.

    SpaceX has been betting that its “fail fast, learn fast” ethos, which has helped it dominate commercial spaceflight, will eventually pay off.

    The company has caught the Super Heavy booster in the launch tower’s giant robotic arms three times — a daring engineering feat it sees as key to rapid reusability and slashing costs.

    NASA is also increasingly reliant on SpaceX, whose Dragon spacecraft is vital for ferrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station.

    SpaceX said Thursday that there are “no commonalities” between the COPVs used on Starship — the current focus on the investigation — and those used on Falcon.

    The Federal Aviation Administration approved an increase in annual Starship rocket launches from five to 25 in early May, stating that the increased frequency would not adversely affect the environment.

    The decision overruled objections from conservation groups that had warned the expansion could endanger sea turtles and shorebirds.

  • From partnership to public feud: Trump and Musk face off

    From partnership to public feud: Trump and Musk face off

    A public showdown between US President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has escalated into a significant political and financial conflict, causing ripples throughout Washington and wiping billions off Tesla’s market value.

    The turmoil began after Musk criticised Trump’s recent tax and spending legislation, which has been central to the administration’s domestic priorities. Musk labelled the bill a “disgusting abomination” on his platform X, accusing Republican lawmakers of irresponsible spending and urging his followers to pressure Congress into rejecting it.

    President Trump, during a press conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, expressed his “disappointment” with Musk’s comments and suggested that their long-standing partnership might be coming to an end. He questioned Musk’s motivations, implying that his criticism stemmed from the bill’s removal of electric vehicle incentives, a decision that could adversely affect Tesla.

    Musk countered, stating that personal benefit was not his concern. In a post on X, he remarked, “Keep the EV/solar incentive cuts, even though oil & gas subsidies remain, but get rid of the mountain of disgusting pork in the bill,” referencing what he believes to be unnecessary expenditures aimed at buying votes.

    The friction worsened on Thursday after Trump took to Truth Social to warn Musk against his government-associated ventures, stating, “The easiest way to save billions in our budget is to cancel Elon’s subsidies and contracts.” His threat specifically targeted companies like SpaceX and Starlink, which heavily depend on government financing.

    Musk retaliated, dismissing the threats and revealing that SpaceX would start shutting down its Dragon spacecraft operations vital for US missions to the International Space Station. He also hinted at potentially financially supporting political challengers to Trump-aligned Republicans, stirring concerns about fractures within the party ahead of the upcoming election cycle.

    Matters escalated further after Musk, without providing evidence, linked Trump to unreleased documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The White House dismissed the allegation, describing it as a distraction from Musk’s grievances regarding policy.

    Meanwhile, Tesla shares plummeted, losing 14% of their value, equating to a $150 billion loss. Analysts labelled it one of the company’s most challenging days in recent times. Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities noted that the public dispute had shaken investor trust and created uncertainty regarding Tesla’s regulatory outlook.

    Musk, who had been part of Trump’s administration as the head of the Department of Government Efficiency (nicknamed “Doge”), resigned from his role last week after 129 days. During his time in office, he implemented significant cuts, disbanding agencies like USAID and claiming to have saved $180 billion — a figure that critics dispute.

    The alliance between Trump and Musk began with Musk’s major financial support for Trump’s 2024 election campaign. Their partnership survived several controversies, including Musk’s unpredictable behaviour and clashes with top officials. But now, it has fallen apart, turning into mutual attacks and political fallout.

    Trump has attempted to mitigate tensions by refraining from mentioning Musk during a public event, but his social media updates indicated otherwise: the bond is severed. “Elon and I had a great relationship,” he remarked noticeably in the past tense.

    Some Republicans fear Musk’s rising influence and considerable wealth might encourage dissent within their party. Meanwhile, Democrats have largely kept quiet, seemingly pleased to observe two influential adversaries undermine each other.

    Musk concluded the day by reminding Trump and the public that although a presidency lasts four years, his own impact could extend for decades. “Trump has 3.5 years left as president,” he tweeted. “But I’ll be around for 40-plus years.”

  • ‘Tesla vandals will end up behind bars’

    ‘Tesla vandals will end up behind bars’

    US Attorney General Pam Bondi said Thursday in the latest public show of support for Elon Musk, a top ally of President Donald Trump, that serious charges are being brought against three people accused of targeting Tesla cars.

    “Let this be a warning: if you join this wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, the Department of Justice will put you behind bars,” Bondi said in a statement.

    The three defendants, who were not identified, “will face the full force of the law” for using Molotov cocktails to set fire to Tesla vehicles and charging stations in Oregon, Colorado and South Carolina, the Justice Department said.

    In the South Carolina incident, an individual “wrote profane messages against President Trump around Tesla charging stations before lighting the charging stations on fire,” it said.

    The Justice Department did not specify the exact charges but said the three defendants could face a minimum of five years in prison and a maximum of 20 years.

    Musk, the South African-born billionaire founder of Tesla and SpaceX, is leading Trump’s ruthless cost-cutting drive at the head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    Several Tesla dealerships around the country have been vandalized in recent weeks and the company’s stock price has plummeted over the past month.

    Trump, in an unprecedented product endorsement by a sitting president, sought to boost Tesla sales earlier this month, briefly turning the White House into a showroom and announcing he was buying one of the electric cars.

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt echoed Bondi’s remarks in an interview with Fox News on Thursday, saying the president will ensure the “harshest penalties” for those who engage in “this vicious violence” against Tesla.

    Leavitt was also asked by reporters about an unusual appeal to buy Tesla stock during a television appearance by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik.

    “I think the commerce secretary was reiterating that the president supports an American made company like Tesla,” she said.

    Tesla, Leavitt added, “was beloved by the American people, particularly Democrats, until Elon Musk decided to vote for Donald Trump.”

    Musk, in an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Tuesday, said Tesla was being targeted because DOGE was taking away money that people were “receiving fraudulently.”

    “They get very upset and they basically want to kill me because I’m stopping their fraud,” he said. “And they want to hurt Tesla because we’re stopping this terrible waste and corruption in the government.”

  • US govt computers hacked, show deepfake of Trump licking Musk’s feet

    US govt computers hacked, show deepfake of Trump licking Musk’s feet

    Deepfake made its way into the US Department of Housing and Urban Development headquarters on Monday after an AI-generated footage of President Donald Trump licking Elon Musk’s feet circulated across screens in the building, with a caption reading, “LONG LIVE THE REAL KING.”

    The caption refers to Trump’s post on the White House’s official social media that read: “CONGESTION PRICING IS DEAD. Manhattan, and all of New York, is SAVED. LONG LIVE THE KING!”

    As reported by independent American media platform Zeteo, the video played on “almost every floor,” with staffers gathering to record it before it was removed.

    Netizens have also reacted to the video that has now been circulating on the internet.

    Many appreciated the move made by the unknown hackers.

    “God I love hackers who use their power for good ”

    “This is true art. May it live long in the annals of history.”

    “protest art at its finest. Bravo!”

    “Cringy but accurate.”

    “This was hands down the best thing I saw today”

    “Are you Sure it’s AI? ”

    Some, however, were disturbed by the graphic nature of the footage.

    “That video is graphic ”

    “I’m not sure whether to laugh or vomit ”

    “Rated R ”

    The incident reportedly occurred on Monday, the first-day union staff (non-supervisors) had to return to the office full-time under Trump’s order to end remote work for federal agencies.

    Last week, Trump’s infamous post came after his transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, sent a letter to New York Governor Kathy Hochul scrapping the transportation department’s agreement on Manhattan’s congestion pricing plan.

    This was followed by a backlash, including from Hochul, who issued a statement, “We are a nation of laws, not ruled by a king.” She added: “Public transit is the lifeblood of New York City and critical to our economic future – as a New Yorker, like president Trump, knows very well.”


    Musk, with Trump at White House, says US will go ‘bankrupt’ without cuts

    Earlier in February, tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has been tapped by President Donald Trump to lead federal cost-cutting efforts, said that the United States would go “bankrupt” without budget cuts.


    Musk leads the efforts under the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and was speaking at the White House with Trump, who has in recent weeks unleashed a flurry of orders aimed at slashing federal spending.

    In particular, Musk took aim at the country’s budget deficit, which topped $1.8 trillion in the last fiscal year.

    He said that reducing federal expenses was not optional.

    The remarks, however, came as the Trump administration finds itself on a collision course with the US courts, as federal judges questioned the legality of White House cost-cutting measures.

    Trump’s sweeping plans, which have effectively shuttered some federal agencies and sent staff home, have sparked legal battles across the country.
    Multiple lawsuits seek to halt what opponents characterize as an illegal power grab.

  • Musk, with Trump at White House, says US will go ‘bankrupt’ without cuts

    Musk, with Trump at White House, says US will go ‘bankrupt’ without cuts

    Tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has been tapped by President Donald Trump to lead federal cost-cutting efforts, said Tuesday that the United States would go “bankrupt” without budget cuts.


    Musk leads the efforts under the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and was speaking at the White House with Trump, who has in recent weeks unleashed a flurry of orders aimed at slashing federal spending.

    In particular, Musk took aim at the country’s budget deficit, which topped $1.8 trillion in the last fiscal year.

    He said that reducing federal expenses was not optional.

    The remarks, however, came as the Trump administration finds itself on a collision course with the US courts, as federal judges questioned the legality of White House cost-cutting measures.

    Trump’s sweeping plans, which have effectively shuttered some federal agencies and sent staff home, have sparked legal battles across the country.
    Multiple lawsuits seek to halt what opponents characterize as an illegal power grab.

    Asked about his conflicts of interest on Tuesday, Musk, who also heads SpaceX — which has multiple US government contracts — and Tesla, said he is seeking to be as transparent as possible.

    The DOGE reform team has triggered alarm among critics as well by gaining access through the US Treasury to the personal and financial data of millions in the United States.

    Cutting on USAid

    Earlier this month, Elon Musk called for the closure of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as two senior security officials were reportedly placed on leave for blocking his team’s access to classified materials.

    Musk, the billionaire owner of Tesla and SpaceX who has become the president’s most powerful backer, called USAID a “criminal organisation” after reports that his team was blocked from accessing restricted areas at the agency’s Washington, DC headquarters.

    “Time for it to die,” Musk posted on his social media platform X.


    President Trump claimed the agency was “run by radical lunatics” and said he was considering its future.

    The assault on the agency tasked with humanitarian relief overseas marks a significant new front in Trump’s move to give unprecedented power to Musk to upend government departments and counter what the pair consider wasteful official spending and overreach.


    “USAID is a criminal organization,” Musk wrote on his X platform, replying to a video alleging USAID involvement in “rogue CIA work.”

    In a subsequent post, Musk doubled down and, without giving evidence, asked his 215 million X followers, “Did you know that USAID, using YOUR tax dollars, funded bioweapon research, including Covid-19, that killed millions of people?”


    He did not elaborate on the allegations, which officials in the previous administration linked to a Russian disinformation campaign.


    USAID has “been run by a bunch of radical lunatics, and we’re getting them out… and then we’ll make a decision (on its future),” Trump said without elaborating.

  • ‘Starlink will have to suspend services if PTA shuts down internet’

    ‘Starlink will have to suspend services if PTA shuts down internet’

    Journalist Azaz Syed claimed on Monday that the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has set conditions for Elon Musk’s satellite broadband company, Starlink, to operate in Pakistan.

    Speaking on the YouTube channel Talk SHOCK, Syed stated that the company has submitted an application to the PTA for approval to launch its internet services in the country.

    According to the journalist, one of the key conditions set by the PTA is that Starlink must comply with government-imposed internet shutdowns. This means that if the government shuts down the internet in the country, Starlink must also suspend its services in Pakistan.

    Musk, while responding to Pakistani social media activists on X (formerly Twitter) last month, confirmed that he was awaiting Islamabad’s approval to launch Starlink in Pakistan.

    Days after the response from the Starlink owner, Minister of State for Information Technology (IT) and Telecommunication, Shaza Fatima Khawaja, stated in an interview with a private news outlet that Musk’s company had registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP).

    “[Following the approval] the space board authority is looking into various technical aspects, and we have communicated [about this] to Starlink,” she said.

    The journalist claimed that some had already brought the Starlink internet device into the country and had used it.

    “Starlink internet is not very expensive, as its routers are available for around $500 to $600,” he said.

    Starlink is a satellite internet constellation built by SpaceX to provide satellite internet access. The system aims to deliver high-speed broadband to areas where access has been unreliable, expensive, or unavailable. The network consists of thousands of small, mass-produced satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO), working in tandem with ground transceivers.

    Reports cited a senior executive from an IT company who stated that they had been using Starlink’s services to maintain a reliable and uninterrupted connection for their overseas customers.

    According to the IT official, the company ordered all necessary equipment from the United Kingdom (UK), and although the service was more expensive, it eased their concerns about losing business.

    “Starlink’s standard residential package is GBP 79 [around PKR 27,000] while business packages start at GBP 110 [around PKR 37,000] per month. Our company has acquired their upgraded package, the monthly fee for which is about GBP 750 [over PKR 2.5 lacs]. Their rates are very high, but we are no longer worried about internet outages and disruption of business activities,” an IT official said.

  • Elon Musk says working to shut USAID down

    Elon Musk says working to shut USAID down

    Elon Musk has called for the closure of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as two senior security officials were reportedly placed on leave for blocking his team’s access to classified materials.

    Musk, the billionaire owner of Tesla and SpaceX who has become the president’s most powerful backer, called USAID a “criminal organisation” after reports that his team was blocked from accessing restricted areas at the agency’s Washington, DC headquarters.

    “Time for it to die,” Musk posted on his social media platform X.


    President Trump claimed the agency was “run by radical lunatics” and said he was considering its future.

    The assault on the agency tasked with humanitarian relief overseas marks a significant new front in Trump’s move to give unprecedented power to Musk to upend government departments and counter what the pair consider wasteful official spending and overreach.


    “USAID is a criminal organization,” Musk wrote on his X platform, replying to a video alleging USAID involvement in “rogue CIA work.”


    In a subsequent post, Musk doubled down and, without giving evidence, asked his 215 million X followers, “Did you know that USAID, using YOUR tax dollars, funded bioweapon research, including Covid-19, that killed millions of people?”


    He did not elaborate on the allegations, which officials in the previous administration linked to a Russian disinformation campaign.


    USAID has “been run by a bunch of radical lunatics, and we’re getting them out… and then we’ll make a decision (on its future),” Trump said Sunday without elaborating.


    He underscored his support for the billionaire, telling reporters Sunday night he felt Musk was “doing a good job.”


    Trump initially froze all aid spending for three months. Though he subsequently issued waivers for food and other humanitarian aid to continue, aid workers say uncertainty reigns with the future of the organization as an independent agency far from assured.


    USAID, an independent agency established by an act of Congress, manages a budget of $42.8 billion meant for humanitarian relief and development assistance around the world.


    A senior official from a US-based organization feared the prioritization of “emergency” assistance was part of a broader plan in which Washington would discontinue funds for anything else.


    There have been reports Trump wants to roll USAID into the State Department. His team did not respond to AFP’s calls for comment.


    During a talk hosted on his X platform at midnight Washington time (0500 GMT Monday), Musk said Trump “agreed that we should shut it (USAID) down.”

    ‘Unelected billionaire’

    The X session — attended by businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and two Republican senators — was on Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), tasked with slashing federal spending.


    Without providing details, Musk said “tremendous progress” had been made.


    “If we can get that deficit in half, from two trillion (dollars) to half, and we can get the economic growth to match… that means there will be no inflation,” Musk said, adding he would be focusing on “fraud and waste.”


    DOGE was founded as part of the so-called “executive office of the president,” as a temporary 18-month organization under the repurposed United States Digital Service.


    It does not enjoy full status as a government department, which would require Congress’s approval, and Musk is neither federal employee nor a government official. It is unclear to whom DOGE is accountable.


    CNN reported that two senior security officials at USAID were put on forced leave after they barred staff from Musk’s DOGE from accessing classified documents.


    PBS also reported DOGE staff attempted to gain access to “secure spaces.”


    Trump’s senior aide Steven Cheung posted on X that the PBS report was “not even remotely true at all.”


    USAID’s account on X had been disabled, AFP confirmed, and its website was still offline.


    Democratic Senator Chris Murphy has criticized the “total destruction” of the agency.


    “The people elected Donald Trump to be President — not Elon Musk,” Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote on X.


    “Having an unelected billionaire, with his own foreign debts and motives, raiding US classified information is a grave threat to national security.”

  • Most grooming offences committed by white men, not Pakistanis: police chiefs

    Most grooming offences committed by white men, not Pakistanis: police chiefs

    The UK’s National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) has set the record straight, stating that white men have carried out the vast majority of sexual grooming gang offences, after the owner of X (formerly Twitter) published a post making false accusations against British-Pakistani men.

    Police databases presented new figures that included quantitative data on ethnicity, showing that white offenders constituted 85 percent of “group-based” child abusers in the first three quarters of 2024. The same data for the whole of 2023 showed that 83 percent of offenders were white.

    Speaking to the press briefing on Friday, the director of the NPCC’s Hydrant programme targeting child sexual abuse, Richard Fewkes, claimed that there is no “significant issue” with “any particular ethnicity or setting”.

    Musk also waged an online campaign against the UK government over the grooming gangs issue, making false allegations against UK Prime Minister (PM) Keir Starmer.

    In a post on Wednesday, he wrote “True” in reply to India’s Rajya Sabha Member of Parliament (MP) Priyanka Chaturvedi, who had accused people of Pakistani origin of being behind the UK’s gang grooming.

    1736601281-07QTDO6TNZ.jpg

    Meanwhile, Musk’s biographer, Seth Abramson, posted a series of notes on X on Tuesday, alleging that Musk may be “going mad.”

    Abramson wrote: “I’m a Musk biographer who has been tracking his online behavior for the last two years, and given that he’s admitted to all of mental illness, heavy drug use, and crippling stress, it is now reasonable to fear he is deeply unwell.”

    1736601335-O2IW47BHAS.jpg

    The billionaire has falsely accused Starmer of being “complicit in the rape of Britain” during his tenure as a Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) between 2008 and 2013 and called safeguarding minister Jess Phillips a “witch” and a “rape genocide apologist”.

    On Friday, Fewkes said, “(The data) reflects what you would expect to see across the country in terms of ethnicity. Offences where grooming gangs are involved are predominantly white. There is not a significant issue here with any particular ethnicity or setting.”

    The NSPCC data indicates that white individuals constituted the largest proportion of child sexual abuse suspects. In 2023, they accounted for 1,884 cases (83%), while Pakistani suspects numbered 62 (2.7%).

    From January to September 2024, there were 1,623 white suspects (85%) and 75 Pakistani suspects (3.9%).

    The NPCC, however, said, “Quarter four 2024 is not included in 2024 data as it is still being worked on.”

    The police have released data in the wake of a heated debate in the House of Commons regarding whether there should be a national statutory inquiry into Pakistani grooming gangs.

    Earlier, The Telegraph reported that grooming gangs are responsible for two child sexual abuse offences reported to police every day.

    The newspaper reported an analysis indicating that there were 4,228 offences of “group-based” child sexual abuse, which constituted 3.7 percent of the 115,489 child sexual abuse and exploitation crimes (including online offences) in 2023.

  • Elon Musk’s unhinged attacks on countries now targets Pakistan

    Elon Musk’s unhinged attacks on countries now targets Pakistan

    CEO Tesla and the richest man on earth, Elon Musk, has continued his streak of attacking different countries on Twitter by replying “True” to an Indian parliamentarian’s tweet accusing Pakistanis of being the only ones involved in the UK’s sex grooming gangs scandal. 


    Indian Member of Rajya Sabha, Priyanka Chaturvedi, recently posted on X, “Repeat after me, they are not ASIAN Grooming Gangs but PAKISTANI grooming gangs. Why should Asians take the fall for one absolute rogue nation?”


    Elon replied to her post by writing just “True”.

    1736422612-N1FJHCI5TZ.jpg


    The debate around the sex grooming gangs has reignited with Elon Musk accusing the UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer of being “complicit” in the scandal. Starmer, in a statement, replied, “Those that are spreading lies and misinformation as far and wide as possible, they’re not interested in victims. They’re interested in themselves,” while calling out the opponents for being “desperate for attention”.


    Notably, the grooming gangs scandal surfaced in the UK back in 2010. 


    Investigations revealed that contrary to right-wing propaganda, 42 percent groomers  were white, while only 14 percent were defined as Asian or Asian British. Meanwhile, 17 percent were black.


    Elon Musk is actively spearheading the movement against leftist or centrist governments around the world. The billionaire expressed support for Donald Trump in America during the US Elections in 2024, and after he won the elections, he went on a spree of supporting the far-right in the world.


    He trolled outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who dismissed Trump’s suggestion that he might use “economic force” to merge Canada with the US. Trudeau had posted, “There isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States. Workers and communities in both our countries benefit from being each other’s biggest trading and security partner.”

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    Musk made fun of him by saying, “Girl, you’re not the governor of Canada anymore, so it doesn’t matter what you say.”

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    Additionally, the tech billionaire has also expressed support for Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. He praised the party by posting, “Only the AfD can save Germany.” 


    The AfD propagates against the immigrant population in the country.


    He also appreciated Meta’s announcement of ending its fact-checking programme in the USA by calling it “cool.”