I wish I could see more of the post by The Artist Formerly Known as Eric. I have no idea of what he is talking about. On the surface it appears that Elon must have been high when responding which might not be much of an excuse. He could have been letting his true feelings out.
This entire subject is very disturbing in that it seems to show an astounding number of legal residents hate America. They give no credence to Israel's fight for survival. They are Tik-Tok-ing support for Osama bin Laden's attack on America. Many of them are recent generation immigrants. Many of them are government bureaucrats and academics. They are nowhere near a majority, but millions of residents harboring pro-terrorist, anti-American feelings is really troubling.
I'm really relieved that the pro-Israel rally on the National Mall was not infiltrated by three dozen suicide bombers. I fully expected it and give full credit to good security protocols and whoever implemented them.
According to the reporting I'm seeing from folks who *actually* understand TikTok, the media is making the bin Laden letter out to be a bigger thing than it actually was.
I read the article and comments. The author pooh-poohs the idea of TikTok influence by flippantly stating the typical TikTok user was born after 2011. He may mean that demographic is in the majority but there are thousands of older teens and adults that show up on news feeds at least trying to influence opinion. The only ones I look at are videos of Chihuahuas. I don't believe one video will change a person, but the cumulative effect could. Something creates the thousands of rowdy rioters that are commonplace these days.
I'm trying to remember the columnists I read between the ages of 17 and 24. They included Walter E. Williams, James Kirkpatric, Bill Buckley, Art Buchwald, Mike Royko and Paul Hemphill (local to Atlanta and Cox Newspapers). Those columns influenced me greatly. Maybe videos are not the influencers I think they are. Certainly not for me. I have trouble paying attention. I read better than I listen.
Maybe, although your explanation seems to come straight from Wikipedia. Whatever the reason, nuts who engage in mass killings have problems bigger than buying in to conspiracy theories. I do think identity politics of all sorts are intended to produce more votes for the sponsoring party.
I wish I could see more of the post by The Artist Formerly Known as Eric. I have no idea of what he is talking about. On the surface it appears that Elon must have been high when responding which might not be much of an excuse. He could have been letting his true feelings out.
This entire subject is very disturbing in that it seems to show an astounding number of legal residents hate America. They give no credence to Israel's fight for survival. They are Tik-Tok-ing support for Osama bin Laden's attack on America. Many of them are recent generation immigrants. Many of them are government bureaucrats and academics. They are nowhere near a majority, but millions of residents harboring pro-terrorist, anti-American feelings is really troubling.
I'm really relieved that the pro-Israel rally on the National Mall was not infiltrated by three dozen suicide bombers. I fully expected it and give full credit to good security protocols and whoever implemented them.
According to the reporting I'm seeing from folks who *actually* understand TikTok, the media is making the bin Laden letter out to be a bigger thing than it actually was.
https://www.garbageday.email/p/tiktok-teens-arent-stanning-osama
I read the article and comments. The author pooh-poohs the idea of TikTok influence by flippantly stating the typical TikTok user was born after 2011. He may mean that demographic is in the majority but there are thousands of older teens and adults that show up on news feeds at least trying to influence opinion. The only ones I look at are videos of Chihuahuas. I don't believe one video will change a person, but the cumulative effect could. Something creates the thousands of rowdy rioters that are commonplace these days.
I'm trying to remember the columnists I read between the ages of 17 and 24. They included Walter E. Williams, James Kirkpatric, Bill Buckley, Art Buchwald, Mike Royko and Paul Hemphill (local to Atlanta and Cox Newspapers). Those columns influenced me greatly. Maybe videos are not the influencers I think they are. Certainly not for me. I have trouble paying attention. I read better than I listen.
Re: Musk - he is outright agreeing with the "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory that inspired the Tree of Life Synagogue shooter.
Re: the "protestors" at the DNC - it reeks of AstroTurf. Maybe not all, but at least in part.
Maybe, although your explanation seems to come straight from Wikipedia. Whatever the reason, nuts who engage in mass killings have problems bigger than buying in to conspiracy theories. I do think identity politics of all sorts are intended to produce more votes for the sponsoring party.
Elon agrees with those that think Jews in the West are cosmopolitan degenerates undermining the White Race.
If Elon's comments are based on ethnic hate, it's deplorable, but he hasn't seen fit to offer another explanation.