If you haven’t read Nilay Patel’s piece for The Verge — “Welcome to hell, Elon” — I strongly recommend you do so immediately. It might be the smartest opinion I’ve read about the whole Musk takeover of Twitter. It’s full of good lines and strong points, so I encourage you to read it for yourself.
But it includes this gem: “I say this with utter confidence because the problems with Twitter are not engineering problems. They are political problems. Twitter, the company, makes very little interesting technology; the tech stack is not the valuable asset. The asset is the user base: hopelessly addicted politicians, reporters, celebrities, and other people who should know better but keep posting anyway. You! You, Elon Musk, are addicted to Twitter. You’re the asset. You just bought yourself for $44 billion dollars.”
It then explains, in cutting detail, why Musk might have just made a $44 billion mistake.
Meanwhile, back to the Pelosi story. The Washington Post’s Isaac Stanley-Becker has “Elon Musk, right-wing figures push misinformation about Pelosi attack.” Stanley-Becker writes, “The rush to sow doubt about the assault on Pelosi’s husband illustrates how aggressively influential figures on the right are seeking to dissuade the public from believing facts about the violence, seizing on the event to promote conspiracy theories and provoke distrust. The House speaker has long been a bugbear for the right, which has intensified its rhetorical blitz on her in recent years — even as extreme threats against members of Congress have increased.”
The personal attacks in ads and commentary against Pelosi have now led to an actual attack in her home. David DePape was charged with one count of “attempted kidnapping of a US official,” according to the US attorney’s office for the Northern District of California. DePape, according to an FBI affidavit, was planning to hold Nancy Pelsoi hostage. He appears to have a history of believing in conspiracy theories, including false claims about the 2020 election and Jan. 6 insurrection.
The New York Times’ Annie Karni, Catie Edmondson and Carl Hulse write that Pelosi has long been on the receiving end of criticism from the right, including personal verbal attacks and calling her things such as “Crazy Nancy” and “Crazyface Pelosi” and “Darth Nancy.”
In 2021, Republican and House minority leader Kevin McCarthy said he wanted to someday become the House speaker and have Pelosi hand him the speaker’s gavel. He then said it would be hard to not hit Pelosi over the head with it — which is even in more poor taste considering the events at her home over the weekend.
The Times wrote, “For the better part of two decades, Republicans have targeted Ms. Pelosi, the most powerful woman in American politics, as the most sinister Democratic villain of all, making her the evil star of their advertisements and fund-raising appeals in hopes of animating their core supporters. The language and images have helped to fuel the flames of anger at Ms. Pelosi on the right, fanned increasingly in recent years by a toxic stew of conspiracy theories and misinformation that has thrived on the internet and social media, with little pushback from elected Republicans. Ms. Pelosi is now one of the most threatened members of Congress in the country.”
And over the weekend, California Gov. Gavin Newsom partly blamed Fox News for the attack at the Pelosi home. Newsom told CBS News’ Major Garrett, “I've seen the dehumanization of Nancy Pelosi. I don't think anyone's been dehumanized like she has consistently. Now I watched this one guy, Jesse Watters or something on Fox News. What he's been saying about Paul Pelosi the last five, six months, mocking him consistently. Don't tell me that's not aiding and abetting all this. Of course it is. They're sowing the seeds, creating a culture and a climate like this. I mean, look online. Look at the sewage that is online that they amplify on these networks and in social media to dehumanize people like Nancy Pelosi and other political leaders."
Some people still don’t get it …
Check out this video, thanks to Mediaite’s Tommy Christopher, of CBS “Face the Nation” moderator Margaret Brennan embarrassing Republican Congressman Tom Emmer over a tweet he posted about Nancy Pelosi. One of Brennan’s finer moments.
Check that
Speaking of Musk and Twitter, the Twitter topic du jour on Monday was that Twitter might start charging verified account users 20 bucks a month for a subscription service. If verified users don’t pay, they could lose their blue check mark.
CNN’s Donie O'Sullivan and Jennifer Korn wrote, “It’s possible the plan and pricing could change, as Twitter’s new billionaire owner Elon Musk works to put his stamp on one of the world’s most important social media platforms. It’s also unclear if some verified users may be exempt from paying the fee; many international organizations and charities, for example, are verified on Twitter.”
This isn’t just about users being able to say they have a cool blue check mark next to their names. As O’Sullivan and Korn wrote, “While the blue check mark has emerged as a status symbol for users, it’s also designed to ensure users can determine which accounts are authentic and which are not, particularly for celebrities, brands and other influential accounts. If Musk were to create a paid barrier for verification, it could make it harder to distinguish whether a notable name is a bot or not.”
Here’s a reasonable take from Washington Post journalist Taylor Lorenz.
A new morning