Billionaire and possible future owner of Twitter Elon Musk slammed the platform’s current leadership with a humorous tweet on July 4 then agreed with another user bemoaning Jordan Peterson’s suspension by saying the company’s “going way too far in squashing dissenting opinions.”
Musk appeared to get into the spirit of Independence Day by sharing a fake Tweet depicting “Twitter in 1775” where iconic American historical figure Paul Revere was fact-checked by Twitter for saying, “The British are coming, the British are coming!” The fake tweet depicted a misinformation label reading, “Learn how British taxes are beneficial for society.”
Revere is most remembered for his famous ride from Boston the night of April 18, 1775, warning local militia of approaching British forces who had intended to destroy military supplies in Concord. The following morning, on April 19, the Battles of Lexington and Concord took place and the Revolutionary War began.
Another Twitter user responded to Musk with a similar fake tweet from Greek philosopher Socrates, who was famously poisoned by the Greek government for criticizing the ruling elite of his own time. The tweet showed Socrates theorizing, “I dunno man, I’m beginning to think that maybe the Ruling Elite aren’t as wise as they claim to be,” and featured a similar spoof of a Twitter fact-check alert, reading, “Learn more about how Socrates is corrupting the youth of Athens.”
The user sharing the image responded to Musk’s tweet by suggesting his image had the “Same energy,” before segueing to ask, “BTW, did you see that [Jordan B. Peterson] was recently banned from the bird app? Strange times…”
Musk responded by observing, “Yeah, they’re going way too far in squashing dissenting opinions.”
This is an excerpt from Fox News.
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