David Hawkins
September 1, 2023
From Slay News
Elon Musk is raising serious concerns about the Democrats’ “woke” agenda and the implications it will have on civilization.
In Musk’s new biography from Walter Isaacson, the Tesla and Twitter/X boss warns that the “woke mind virus” is “anti-human” and must be “stopped.”
Musk told Isaacson that his “communist” transgender son severed ties with his wealthy father after being brainwashed by a “woke” school.
He says that his son, a biological male who believes he is a “transgender woman,” was brainwashed by the school into “thinking that anyone rich is evil.”
Musk’s son attended the Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences in Santa Monica.
“Unless the woke mind virus, which is fundamentally anti-science, anti-merit, and anti-human in general, is stopped, civilization will never become multi-planetary,” Musk told Isaacson.
The WSJ printed an excerpt from the book:
By then, a new ingredient had been added to this cauldron: Musk’s swelling concern with the dangers of what he called the “woke mind virus” that he believed was infecting America.
“Unless the woke mind virus, which is fundamentally anti-science, anti-merit, and anti-human in general, is stopped, civilization will never become multi-planetary,” he told me gravely.
Musk’s anti-woke sentiments were partly triggered by the decision of his oldest child, Xavier, then 16, to transition.
“Hey, I’m transgender, and my name is now Jenna,” [he] texted the wife of Elon’s brother. “Don’t tell my dad.”
When Musk found out, he was generally sanguine, but then Jenna became a fervent Marxist and broke off all relations with him.
“[He] went beyond socialism to being a full communist and thinking that anyone rich is evil,” he says.
The rift pained him more than anything in his life since the infant death of his firstborn child Nevada.
“I’ve made many overtures,” he says, “but she doesn’t want to spend time with me.”
He blamed it partly on the ideology he felt that Jenna imbibed at Crossroads, the progressive school [he] attended in Los Angeles.
Twitter, he felt, had become infected by a similar mindset that suppressed right-wing and anti-establishment voices.
About Musk’s Twitter deal, Isaacson writes:
Musk says that it became clear to him when he got to Hawaii that he would not be able to fix Twitter or turn it into X.com by going on the board:
“I decided I didn’t want to be co-opted and be some sort of quisling on the board.”
There was one other factor.
Musk was in a manic mood, and he was acting impetuously.
As was often the case, his ideas fluctuated wildly with his mood swings.
Even as he was barreling toward buying Twitter, he was texting with Kimbal about their idea of starting a new social media company.
“I think a new social-media company is needed that is based on the blockchain and includes payments,” he wrote.
But by later that afternoon—Saturday, April 9—he had embraced the idea of buying Twitter.
“It already has a base of users,” he told me.
“You need that booster to launch X.com.”
He sent a text to Birchall. “This is real,” he assured him.
“There is no way to fix the company as a 9% shareholder.”
Musk then flew to Vancouver to meet his on-and-off girlfriend, Claire Boucher, the performance artist known as Grimes.
She had been pushing him to go there so that she could introduce their son X (yes, X) to her parents and aging grandparents.
But when it came time to drive to see her parents, she decided to leave Musk back in the hotel.
“I could tell that he was in stress mode,” she says.
Indeed he was.
Late that afternoon, Musk texted Taylor his official decision.
“After several days of deliberation—this is obviously a matter of serious gravity—I have decided to move forward with taking Twitter private,” he said.
That night, after Grimes returned to their hotel, he unwound by immersing himself in a new video game, “Elden Ring,” which he had downloaded onto his laptop.
Elaborately rendered with cryptic clues and strange plot twists, it requires intense focus, especially when it comes to calculating when to attack.
He spent a lot of time in the game’s most dangerous regions, a fiery-red hellscape known as Caelid.
“Instead of sleeping,” Grimes said, “he played until 5:30 in the morning.”
Moments after he finished, he sent out a tweet: “I made an offer.”