12/05/2023
These corporations are working with Obama/Biden’s Trojan Horse and trying to break Musk because Twitter – now X – is freedom of the press for us and these corporate/foreigners don’t like it.
Let’s stand by our two men – PRESIDENT TRUMP/MUSK. That is all we have as support. If X goes – we have nothing left because the left media own the rest.
Boycott the companies he is talking about.
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Speaking at the 2023 DealBook Summit in New York on Wednesday, Elon Musk, the owner of social media site X (formerly Twitter), scoffed at advertisers boycotting the platform. https://cnb.cx/3T3hw8A
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ttps://www.businessinsider.com/walmart-joins-list-major-companies-leaving-elon-musk-x-2023-12
12/03/2023
OK – Google illegal – you have erased this twice
Folks, we have to help out Musk. What they are doing to him affects us, deeply. The corporations are all in the tank with Obama/Biden to take away our freedom. MUSK IS FIGHTING FOR US.
These corporations are loaded with foreign executives who hate the U.S. and are in the same “nut roll” trying to take the U.S. down as Obama/Biden.
If Musk goes down – so does our freedom of expression.
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ttps://www.msn.com/en-us/money/topstocks/musk-no-walmart-no-problem/ar-AA1kU3Z9
Just add an ‘h’ to the above.
Elon Musk has been facing criticism, including from Tesla investors, for endorsing an antisemitic post on X. Anadolu / Getty© Anadolu / Getty
- Walmart has joined the growing list of companies suspending their ads on X.
- It comes after Elon Musk appeared to endorse an antisemitic post.
- Musk said that it was “a mistake” and “one of the most foolish things” he’d done on the platform.
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Elon Musk is auctioning off Twitter’s signs and decorations as part of the X HQ overhaul — take a look©Tayfun Coskun/Getty Images
- X — formerly Twitter — will auction off items from its San Francisco HQ due to its brand overhaul.
- The auction is being held by Heritage Global Partners and will last from September 12-14.
- All items are listed at a starting bid of $25. Items include furniture, appliances, and signs.
What do a beer tap, a drum kit, and a bird-shaped coffee table all have in common? They’re all being auctioned off by X, formerly known as Twitter, and could be yours.
The auction, hosted by Heritage Global Partners, will start on September 12 at 7 a.m. PST and end on September 14 at 9 a.m. PST. All items have a starting bid of $25. They are all being sold out of X headquarters in San Francisco.
Just because these items are being auctioned off doesn’t mean you’ll be able to fill your living room with furniture from Twitter HQ. According to HGP’s terms and conditions, buyers must use the items in their businesses and cannot purchase them for personal use. HGP will help buyers carry items into the loading area, but it does not provide shipping services. Buyers will have to coordinate their own shipping.
This is not the first time that Musk’s X is holding an auction. In January, the company sold items from its HQ including a pizza oven, office furniture, and an espresso machine. The most expensive item from that auction was a Twitter statue, which sold for $12,000.
This auction comes after Elon Musk purchased Twitter back in October 2022. He bought the platform for $44 billion and has since made some major changes to the platform including, most notably, a new name — X. The Twitter bird and signature sky blue theme are slowly being removed in favor of the black and white X branding. See more
Walmart announced on Friday that it will stop advertising on Elon Musk’s social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.
“We aren’t advertising on X as we’ve found other platforms to better reach our customers,” a Walmart spokeswoman told Bloomberg News.
The retailer, which is the largest in the US by sales, joins several other major companies including Disney, Apple, IBM, and Warner Bros in pulling ads from the platform since Musk seemingly endorsed an antisemitic post.
But Joe Benarroch, X’s head of business operations, said on CBS MoneyWatch that the company had stopped advertising on X in October, “so this is not a recent pausing.”
In a statement to Business Insider, Walmart said: “We are not actively advertising on X. This is not about a specific change to our advertising policies. We’ve simply decreased spend over time to align with performance.”
“These decisions are made in a dynamic market and could change in the future,” it added.
In a dig at Walmart on Friday, Musk replied to a tweet about the news saying: “I prefer HEB.”
He had harsher words at the DealBook Summit this week, raging against big advertisers that have ditched his platform and warning that they could “kill” X.
X CEO Lina Yaccarino sent a memo around the company Thursday backing up Musk.
“Our principles do not have a price tag, nor will they be compromised — ever,” she wrote. “No matter how hard they try, we will not be distracted by sideline critics who don’t understand our mission.”
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Musk has since said the post was a “mistake” and “one of the most foolish things” he’d done on the platform. The controversy could cost the company up to $75 million in ad revenue by the end of 2023, The New York Times reported.
The investor Ross Gerber has said that Musk’s X comments have also damaged Tesla, saying he’d never seen a CEO do “so many detrimental things” to harm a brand.
“I’ve never had this with any company I’ve invested in in my entire life, where the CEO does so many detrimental things that destroy the brand, because bottom line that’s what’s happening. It’s absolutely outrageous, his behaviors and the damage he’s caused to the brand,” he said.
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Remember Walmart backed the Clinton’s and you know how that wen
kommonsentsjane