Elon Musk Repeats Criticism Of George Soros, Argues He ‘Hates Humanity’
In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, Elon Musk called out Democrat megadonor George Soros — arguing that the 92-year-old billionaire “hates humanity.”
Musk made the remarks in response to a ZeroHedge article that discusses a previous comment by Soros in which he wrote: “I fancied myself as some kind of god.”
“Soros arbitraged politics,” Musk replied in a tweet. “He figured out that spending small amounts of money in many obscure, but influential, races is far more effective than money spent on major contests. The mistake people make is thinking that he did it for the good of humanity. He hates humanity.”
Musk’s comments are likely in reference to the numerous far-left district attorneys and other politicians in local races that Soros used his immense wealth to help get elected across the United States. As Glenn Beck has repeatedly noted, Soros-backed district attorneys have pushed soft-on-crime policies that have led to skyrocketing crime in many Democrat-run cities.
This is far from the first time that Musk, who is also a billionaire, called out Soros.
In another tweet in May, Musk argued that Soros reminded him of “Magneto” — referring to the comic book villain from The X Men.
He later jokingly apologized for the tweet, writing that it “was really unfair to Magneto.”
In response to a desperate attempt from a far-left commentator to defend Soros — and Magneto — Musk made similar comments about Soros hating humanity.
“He wants to erode the very fabric of civilization. Soros hates humanity,” he wrote.
Responding to yet another tweet about the disastrous consequences of Soros’ meddling in U.S. elections, Musk pointed to a particular criminal case that received national attention — the attack on comedian Dave Chapelle, where the attacker received an extremely light sentence from a Soros-backed prosecutor despite being a career criminal.
“Perfectly said,” he replied. “Among other things, Soros astutely identified a massive arbitrage opportunity in district attorney elections, where a relatively small amount of money has outsized influence. Soros’s instructions to his pet prosecutors were (essentially) to minimize prosecuting even violent criminals. That’s why a criminal – someone who had already stabbed his roommate – could brutally assault Dave Chapelle on stage with that same deadly weapon and yet receive merely a misdemeanor!”