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Elon Musk has appeared to mock antiracism initiatives by Twitter’s own staff, as well as Black Lives Matter more broadly.
Mr. Musk appeared to laugh at T-shirts that had been made by Twitter’s internal business group for Black employees.
He then criticized Black Lives Matter protestors. He said that the shirts stemmed from the protests in Ferguson, Missouri and that those protests were misguided.
“’Hands up don’t shoot’ was made up,” he said. “The whole thing was a fiction.”
He then deleted that post, and instead simply shared a link to the Department of Justice report into the death of Michael Brown, which started those protests.
Mr. Musk’s tweets began when he seemingly found a set of T-shirts with the message “#StayWoke” written on them.
Those shirts were made by Twitter’s “Blackbirds” group. When it started selling the shirts, in April 2016, Blackbirds said that its mission is to “support and promote diversity at Twitter, create a more inclusive work environment, and enrich communities outside of Twitter”.
It said also that the message of the T-shirts “simply means to stay informed about the events happening in the world around you”.
Hours later, he shared a post more explicitly attacking those T-shirts, claiming they “stem from Ferguson protests”. “Obama’s own DOJ proved this [and] exonerated the cop.”
While it is true that the Department of Justice concluded that police officer Darren Wilson had shot Michael Brown in self-defense, it strongly criticized the police department and its response to the protests that followed.
Mr. Musk’s latest tweets brought an especially high amount of engagement, even on a Twitter feed that is probably the site’s most controversial. Within hours of posting, the post about T-shirts had received 55,000 retweets and 40,000 responses.
Many of those responses were highly charged.
“Sign & sell them! Collector’s item!” wrote venture capitalist David Sacks. “I suspect that mocking, signing, and selling the Blackbirds shirts won’t be as good of a joke as you seem to think it is,” responded journalist Mat Honan.
In 2016, one of the T-shirts was worn by Jack Dorsey, who was then chief executive of Twitter. He said that the shirts and its message was intended to be about “really being aware, and staying aware, and keep questioning”, though that was attacked at the time as a cynical way to market Twitter itself.
Source: Andrew Griffin/Finance.yahoo.com
Date Posted: Wednesday, November 23rd, 2022 , Total Page Views: 400
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