This chart Nate Silver made of the X accounts with the most engagement in 2026 seems like it might be useful to show decent orgs who resist moving their primary online presence off X. Is this really the company your org wants to keep?

https://www.natesilver.net/p/social-media-has-become-a-freak-show?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1198116&post_id=193285131&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=wabr&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

This is also why I have little patience for the "we have to stay on X to ~resist~" argument. If you are looking for people whose minds are available to be changed, X is the absolute last place you will find them
@jalefkowit you won't be allowed into their feed, anyway. The Xitter algorithm elevates right wing extremists exclusively, now.
@jalefkowit This all will make sense if you just think of this as a game of http://slither.com/io.
slither.io

The most famous slither game in the world! Play with millions of players around the world and try to become the longest of the day!

slither.io
@stefan @jalefkowit a game where the rules can be changed by the person who bought the game, unless Kevin Sorbo and James Woods have been in any movies at all lately

@jalefkowit I think abandoning X is the most reasonable thing. I can understand at least a couple of counter-arguments, but they aren't very convincing to me. I eventually left Twitter over its toxification and what that was doing to me (and not wanting to be part of that culture). I was on there, so I told myself, because Trump was president and had started making world-changing announcements; I felt like I couldn't look away, and had to know what was coming.

Well, I get pretty good updates here and elsewhere. I don't need to be on X, Truth Social, threads, or any other deeply fascist-embedded platform. It's a burden lifted.