Maybe.
But aTm quoted Elizabeth Warren not Mitch McConnell.
Moderators: eCat, hedge, Cletus
Maybe.
In January 2020, thousands of Twitter employees gathered in Houston for a corporate summit called #OneTeam. During the event, Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s chief executive at the time, revealed he had invited a surprise guest. Then, with a wave and a smile, Elon Musk appeared on giant screens above the stage. The crowd cheered, clapped and pumped fists. “We love you,” one employee shouted.
Yes. It really has.
I feel a change happening.aTm wrote: ↑Tue Apr 26, 2022 10:54 amSince January of 2020, his electric car manufacturer, long a holy grail of the left became the world's most valuable auto manufacturer and went over a a trillion dollars in market cap. SpaceX started sending people space from America again (one of my memorable highlights from the heart of the pandemic), etc. But he's like taken a turn among the looney toons clown crowd because he tweeted some disagreement about how COVID was being handled (like most of the country will have done, over some policy or another) and maybe that he disagreed with the lunatic obsession with pronouns at some point, I think? A true evil force that must be stopped, it seems, according to some, many of whom treated him like a liberal god less than 3 years ago.
So 27 percent of the company is the voice representing all of the company, which includes an equal number of people that disagree, and a much larger group of people that dont care. Perhaps the biggest problem with Twitter style social media is people in the real world acting like the opinions expressed there are representative of the real world when they are not even close to representative of the full gamut of society at large. You have politicians and businesses mingling and focusing their attention on what is really a fringe element. Perhaps even a fringe of a fringe. There's people like me, or us, who look at twitter and share tweets and get information, who are really just a slice of society ourselves and generally of a certain age and income group. And then there is a fringe of that group that are the absolute lunatics who actually comment on tweets and argue with each other, and swarm around whatever is the bullshit of the day. The idea that their opinions mean anything is insane.But other employees have argued in internal messages seen by The Times that their co-workers have shifted too far to the left side of the political spectrum, making employees who support Mr. Musk’s plans too uncomfortable to speak up. In a worker-run survey of nearly 200 Twitter employees on Blind, an anonymous workplace review app, 44 percent said they were neutral on Mr. Musk. Twenty-seven percent said they loved Mr. Musk, while 27 percent said they hated him.