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10 Elon Musk Memes After Tesla And Twitter's Stock Crash
Elon Musk is the billionaire who's purchased Twitter. Well, supposedly, as the stock prices have dipped badly lately and the transaction is "stalled," so in a way, nothing's changed quite yet. But what has changed is the value of Tesla stock as well, plus Elon Musk's personal wealth, which has dipped below 200 billion USD. Clearly, he's experiencing unimaginable poverty levels. Investors are mad, Twitter users are still caught up in endless debates, and still nothing has changed except for Elon's own net worth issues we can't wrap our minds around. While the rest of us are dealing with endless debt, we can hope that the stock market goes back up, and until then we can mock Elon Musk for not suffering any real consequences of a market problem that's altering many of our lives quite significantly. Here are some memes about the famous mega-billionaire and his new legacy, which is still leaving many of us divided and annoyed.
Big Mistake
You don't want to anger Tesla's autopilot by talking trash about Elon Musk. It might not be Hal from _2001: A Space Odyssey, but its smarter than most drivers out there.
Stop Pretending This Is a Good Thing
(Source: Reddit)
Elon Musk buying Twitter refers to events in early 2022 that revolved around Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk acquiring Twitter. After hinting at buying the company and then being placed on its board of directors, Musk then made moves to buy the website's shares in April 2022 after not joining the board and theories about him attempting an impending "hostile takeover" appearing online. He then offered roughly $43 billion dollars to buy Twitter, leading to controversy and inspiring reactions and memes across social media. In late April 2022, Musk's offer was accepted by the Twitter board of executives.
To Infinity and Beyond
Wrong Choice
(Source: Reddit)
The lives of millions of people could be changed instantly by billionaires like Musk spending their money on humanitarian projects instead of claiming they're "not liquid enough" and later buying a social media platform for 43 billion dollars.