I know it's fun to be flippant or dismissive about Musk demolishing Twitter (and it is legitimately fun), but I am among those whose life trajectory was radically altered by Twitter, almost entirely for the best. I follow 272 people on Twitter, and there are another couple of hundred people who I don't follow but check in on, and hundreds more who I have discussions with often...and the loss of that social group is sad. I'm grateful that many of those folks are moving to Mastodon.
@waldoj having a difficult believing the twitter narrative that he bought twitter with no real plan and is just winging it because a long list of allegedly serious banks and investors financed it. So if he’s destroying it right now instead of executing a plan he’s making some powerful folks angry. And if this was the plan all along then wow $44 billion comes with no due diligence. What does that mean for confidence in the larger tech economy?
@griesar I think the simplest explanation (and most likely) has to be that he thought this would be a cakewalk, and that he alone could fix things. Also, he didn’t *want* to buy Twitter, but was forced to. But I remain pretty suspicious of the alternatives!
@waldoj other investors and the banks weren’t forced though. So why would they back him with no real plan?