'Let That Sink In' - Elon Musk Barges Into Twitter HQ Ahead Of Deal Close
Update (10/20/2022 1520ET): Elon Musk sauntered into Twitter's San Francisco headquarters on Wednesday carrying a kitchen sink in preparation for his Friday takeover of the company.
Entering Twitter HQ – let that sink in! pic.twitter.com/D68z4K2wq7
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 26, 2022
The world's richest man also changed his Twitter bio to "Chief Twit."
According to Twitter's chief marketing officer, Leslie Berland, "Elon is in the SF office this week meeting with folks, walking the halls, and continuing to dive in on the important work you all do," adding "For everyone else, this is just the beginning of many meetings and conversations with Elon, and you’ll all hear directly from him on Friday."
Now fast forward to Friday:
* * *
Update (1355ET): Elon Musk has told debt bankers that he intends to close the Twitter deal on Friday.
Equity investors in Elon Musk's take private of Twitter have received paperwork from his lawyers at Skadden Arps in order to prepare for closing the deal. It's another sign deal is on track for Friday close. $TWTR
— David Faber (@davidfaber) October 25, 2022
* * *
Twitter employees have penned an open letter to soon-to-be boss Elon Musk and the Board of Directors begging to keep their jobs, after the Washington Post reported that Musk is planning to get rid of nearly 75% of the company's 7,500 workers - whittling Twitter down to a 'skeleton' staff of just over 2,000.
"Elon Musk’s plan to lay off 75% of Twitter workers will hurt Twitter’s ability to serve the public conversation," reads a draft of the letter, which has not yet been published. "A threat of this magnitude is reckless, undermines our users’ and customers’ trust in our platform, and is a transparent act of worker intimidation."
NEW: An unknown number of Twitter employees are circulating an open letter to @elonmusk demanding they be allowed to keep all their jobs, pick journalistic and geopolitical winners and losers, and retain all their employment benefits.
— Raheem J. Kassam (@RaheemKassam) October 25, 2022
The participation trophy generation. pic.twitter.com/R3Mp3CQifA
The letter then suggests that the full staff is "helping to uplift independent journalism in Ukraine and Iran, as well as powering social movements around the world."
The employees then demand that Musk "explicitly commit to preserve our benefits, those both listed in the merger agreement and not (e.g. remote work). We demand leadership to establish and ensure fair severance policies for all workers before and after any change in ownership."
They also demand "Dignity," writing "We demand transparent, prompt and thoughtful communication around our working conditions. We demand to be treated with dignity, and to not be treated as mere pawns in a game played by billionaires."
Following the '75% layoff' report, 'experts' told ABC News that the change could "compromise the platform's capacity to police false or harmful content, with ramifications that extend to social issues like election integrity," and that "The experience of a typical user could change significantly, they added, noting the possible rise of harassment and other forms of corrosive discourse."
Cuts to the content moderation workforce would align with statements made by Musk in recent months about his commitment to the principle of free speech, suggesting that Twitter should permit all speech that stops short of violating the law, the experts said. -ABC News
Musk has reportedly told employees that "Anyone who is a significant contributor should have nothing to worry about," according to a June 16 tweet from Bloomberg reporter Kurt Wagner.
A few updates from Elon's all-hands at Twitter this morning:
— Kurt Wagner (@KurtWagner8) June 16, 2022
He was just asked about layoffs and replied that the company "needs to get healthy" without rejecting the idea.
"Anyone who is a significant contributor should have nothing to worry about," he added $TWTR
"If there is more harassment and other forms of toxic speech, if there is more misinformation and disinformation, then people's experience on the platform is going to be really different," said Zeve Sanderson, the executive director at New York University's Center for Social Media and Politics.
In short, Twitter employees are freaking out, and left-wing 'experts' fear that free speech will allow 'dangerous' information to reach millions.
This is what it looks like when ideological zealots lose control over narratives.
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