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Elon Musk

X, a social media platform formerly known as Twitter, has been powered out all day Monday. The owner Elon Musk finally told the story behind it. Well, behind what he thinks is. The billionaire oligarch said X was hit by a “main cyber attack” although he provided no evidence to support his claim.

“There are huge cyber attacks on X,” Musk tweeted on Monday afternoon. “We are attacked every day, but this is done with a lot of resources. It involves a large coordination group and/or a country. Tracking…”

Considering how he made everything so open, Musk seemed to be just guessing the cause of the power outage. It is important to remember that Musk only has a long history on various topics. A recent example is Joe Rogan, who didn’t have any employee thoughts when Musk lied about several things, including Tesla joining the company. Musk has long tried to gain credibility for starting a company, which is incorrect. Rogan asked Musk, prompting the billionaire to double his lies.

X has experienced several relatively minor power outages since Musk purchased the site in October 2022, but the ongoing disruption on Monday was bad. Strangely, on Monday, a Gizmodo writer in Southern California, a Gizmodo writer working in Southern California broke down Monday, but was able to access the site at the time of writing. However, other Gizmodo employees in New York and South Carolina cannot access the platform.

If X is attacked by DDOS, who may be behind? Frankly speaking, there are too many potential suspects to calculate. Musk has made many people angry in recent months, first of all, helping President Donald Trump elect at least $277 million in campaign donations. Musk then paid two respects to the Nazi style on the day Trump took office, and later he denied that it was to invoke Nazi Germany. The oligarch then went to work on illegally demolishing federal agencies such as the United States Agency for International Development and sent his team of Doge Dipshits to penetrate sensitive government data, including everything from the U.S. Treasury Department’s tax returns to the Social Security database.

We may never provide real answers to why X struggles today, but you can rest assured that anything that actually happens, Musk will use it to claim he is a victim. That is the magazine's mentality, Musk is the richest person in the world. These guys always find a minority that sounds like oppressed.

Signs of people protesting on February 27, 2025 at Elon Musk outside the Tesla dealership in West Bloomfield, Michigan

Musk and his company Tesla have been the target of ongoing protests at dealers nationwide in recent weeks. Rather than admitting seriously that people might not like the fascist acquisition he orchestrated, the billionaire tried to insist that it was the result of affluent liberals like George Soros who went out and hurt him.

“A survey found that there are five ACTBLUE-funded groups responsible for Tesla's protests: troublemakers, disruptive projects, rise and resistance, indivisible projects and American democratic socialists,” Musk wrote on Saturday.

Actblue is essentially just a payment processor, but Musk tried to make it sound like a dark group to get him. If you donate to any Democratic group or candidate during the 2024 presidential campaign, there is a good chance that Actblue will show up on your billing statement.

“Actblue funders include George Soros, Reed Hoffman, Herbert Sandler, Patricia Bowman and Leah Hunter Hendrix,” Musk continued. “Actblue is currently investigating allowing foreign and illegal donations to violate campaign finance regulations in violation of campaign finance regulations. This week, seven senior ACTBLUE officials, including associate lawyers, resigned.”

It should be noted that Herbert Sandler passed away in 2019, Patricia Bauman passed away in 2024, and George Soros stopped appearing publicly due to his age. Musk didn't know what he was talking about. But he will continue to blame the dead for that bubbling righteous anger.

X did not immediately answer questions sent by email on Monday. If we hear back, Gizmodo will update this post.

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