Twitter turmoil fuels worry Elon Musk’s free-speech vision means more social division
WASHINGTON — For a platform that once only allowed sentences as long as this one, the teeter-totter fate of Twitter sure is consuming a lot of oxygen.
And new owner Elon Musk is rapidly earning a reputation to rival that of Twitter’s most infamous bomb-thrower: former president Donald Trump.
“You just took the words right out of my mouth,” said Philip Napoli, an expert on media and democracy at Duke University in Durham, N.C.
The $44-billion shotgun wedding between an ambitious man with an outsized appetite for public attention and one of the world’s most powerful social media tools is already proving a potent combination, Napoli said.