Elon Musk tells US politician Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to ‘stop hitting on me’
With his takeover of Twitter causing controversy, the world’s richest person has responded to claims of having an “ego problem”.
Elon Musk had a bizarre response to a US politician who he thought was slamming the billionaire for having an “ego problem” and claiming his purchase of Twitter had caused “an explosion of hate crimes”.
The SpaceX founder urged prominent Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to “stop hitting” on him in response to her blistering tweet.
“Tired of having to collectively stress about what explosion of hate crimes is happening bc some billionaire with an ego problem unilaterally controls a massive communication platform and skews it because Tucker Carlson or Peter Thiel took him to dinner and made him feel special,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted.
The high profile progressive was referring to Fox News host Tucker Carlson and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel.
Musk, the world’s richest person, had his $A61.4 billion ($US44 billion) offer to purchase Twitter was accepted on Monday.
Despite Musk never being named in the tweet, he was quick to respond to her dig apparently acknowledging himself as the billionaire with the “ego problem”.
“Stop hitting on me, I’m really shy,’ he tweeted, adding a blushing emoji.
The Tesla founder has a net worth of $US249 billion ($A353 billion), according to Bloomberg.
But Ocasio-Cortez said she wasn’t referring to Musk. “I was talking about Zuckerberg but ok,” she shot back.
Mark Zuckerberg is Facebook’s founder, who has an estimated wealth of $US74 billion ($A105 billion), according to Bloomberg.
However, the US politician then deleted her response to Musk about a minute later.
Ocasio-Cortez later followed-up on Saturday further mocking the new owner of the social media giant tweeting: “Like I said, ego problems”, and posting a screen shot of her earlier tweet.
ð¤·ð½ââï¸ like I said, ego problems https://t.co/IpyCkMadP8
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) April 30, 2022
She added in another post to a user that described her response to Musk as “epic” that she deleted the tweet because “I try to avoid giving people with massive ego complexes like this the attention and QTs/replies they crave and are seeking (when I can help it)”.
Many Twitter users were quick to criticise Musk after the exchange.
“This website is free, unless you’re Musk, in which case it costs $44 billion and a bruised ego,” one wrote.
Leaked internal communications from Twitter reveal employees at the social media platform are overtaken by despair and anger about Elon Musk’s month-long effort to acquire the company.
In a statement on Tuesday, Musk said he wants “to make Twitter better than ever by enhancing the product with new features, making the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeating the spam bots, and authenticating all humans”, adding that the platform has “tremendous potential”.
He has also said he wants to champion freedom of speech, but critics say he has a troubled history with truth.
His employees must sign gag orders to get their jobs. He lashes out – verbally and legally – at his critics.
Media publications and even individual journalists are among his favourite targets – especially when they dare analyse his performance or behaviour.
“In reality, Twitter being owned by one person, some of whose own tweets have been false, sexist, market-moving and arguably defamatory poses a risk to the platform’s future,” argued University of Canberra social scientists John Hawkins and Michael Walsh.
Musk has until October to complete the Twitter takeover.