Elon Musk, current Space X, Tesla, and Twitter CEO, sat down with CNBC after Tesla’s shareholders call and just like former President Trump he took it to the media.
CNBC didn’t know what to do when Elon just told it like it is.
During the interview, CNBC anchor David Faber asked Musk if he was worried about losing money over his social media comments.
“I’ll say what I want to say and if the consequence of that is losing money — so be it,” Musk said.
“I’ll say what I want to say and if the consequence of that is losing money — so be it”
–@ElonMusk pic.twitter.com/dKOBiJeKpG— ALX 🇺🇸 (@alx) May 16, 2023
Musk also discussed that before he took over Twitter was used to suppress information.
.@elonmusk: “Twitter and others engaged in an act of suppression of information that was relevant to the public [in Oct.-Nov. 2020]. That’s a terrible thing that happened. That’s election interference.” pic.twitter.com/oM3oLmhmso
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 17, 2023
Musk was fearless when he was questioned over his comments calling George Soros a super villain.
Elon Musk is asked about his Tweet saying George Soros reminds him of Magneto 🤣 pic.twitter.com/4gfsURVGIF
— ALX 🇺🇸 (@alx) May 16, 2023
He then attacked the social media company for suppressing the Hunter Biden story.
Elon Musk calls the suppression of the Hunter Biden Laptop story “election interference”… “Some of these conspiracy theories have turned out to be true.”
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) May 16, 2023
There was a hilarious moment when Musk was asked if he regretted voting for Joe Biden.
Elon Musk is asked if he regrets voting for Joe Biden “Man.. I wish we could just have a normal human being as President” pic.twitter.com/JzWaLYn4Wr
— ALX 🇺🇸 (@alx) May 16, 2023
Perhaps the moment that really triggered the left was when Elon slammed those who still demand to work from home.
Musk told CNBC he only takes two to three days off per year, works seven days a week and get six hours of sleep a night. He said it’s morally wrong for people in the “laptop class” to demand to work from home when service workers, factory workers, and others still show up in person.