It began with a ‘Xeet,’ or rather, a post on X, the social media platform that used to be Twitter, before Elon Musk rechristened it and, in the process, turned it into a digital colosseum where billionaires and presidents wrestled for narrative control. In April 2025, Donald Trump was back in the White House, and Elon Musk—less a man than a gravitational field of ambition—had finally soured on the president he once championed.
Musk posted a characteristically cryptic, mildly threatening message: ‘Interesting to consider who really won 2024. Without the free speech reforms on this platform, some elections wouldn’t have been quite so…democratic.’ He didn’t mention Trump by name. He didn’t have to. The implication was clear: Musk had helped Trump win, and Trump wasn’t being grateful enough.
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