Elon Musk’s disdain for the Democratic Party was never subtle, but in recent weeks his commentary on the upcoming US presidential election and his attacks against?Vice?President Kamala Harris have intensified, aided by a crude use of burgeoning artificial intelligence technology.
On?Monday, Musk?posted?an AI-generated image?on his social media platform?that depicted Harris as a communist, wearing a red uniform complete with hammer and sickle emblazoned hat.
Musk, who has endorsed former President Donald?Trump?for president?and poured millions into a super PAC supporting the Republican, captioned the image with the false assertion,?“Kamala?vows to be a communist dictator on day one. Can you believe she wears that outfit!?”
The image, which appeared to violate?X’s policy?on manipulated content, resembled an AI-generated image posted by Trump last month during the Democratic National Convention, envisioning Harris addressing a crowd under communist symbols.
Musk’s post came a day after he shared another post with a screenshot suggesting that only “high status males” should be able to participate in government because women (and men with “low testosterone”) are not capable of critical thought. Musk posted it to his 196 million followers with the comment, “interesting observation.”
The sexist screed appears to have originated on 4Chan,?the?notorious hate-filled website that has been linked to mass-shootings.
By choosing to amplify disinformation and?misogynist?views, Musk, a South African billionaire who is both the owner of X and?the?most-followed account on the platform, is?promoting?radical?content?to the masses that might otherwise languish in the darkest?corners of the internet.
By Tuesday?afternoon, less than 24 hours after Musk shared the fake image and false statement depicting Harris as a communist, the post had been viewed?nearly 60?million times, according to data from X.?Musk’s post?suggesting women shouldn’t take part in democracy had been viewed more than 19 million times.
X did not respond to a CNN request for comment.
The posts come after Brazilian authorities?blocked access to X?in the country in a battle over the spread of misinformation and hate speech on the platform aimed at undermining the nation’s democracy.
Since taking over the platform,?Musk has touted X’s?“community?notes” feature as a way of transparently allowing crowd-sourced fact-checking misinformation on his platform.
Yet neither post was fact-checked through the community notes feature. Musk’s defenders, of which there are many who are vocal on X, have attempted?to argue that some posts like these are satirical or are not meant to be taken seriously.
But Musk is taken seriously. He is one of the world’s most powerful?people?who controls one of the world’s most important online platforms on the precipice of an historic American presidential election where he is actively campaigning for a candidate.
When Musk took over Twitter in 2022 in a $44 billion acquisition, he claimed that the platform would remain impartial to avoid the perception of tilting the scales for a political party.
“For Twitter to deserve public trust, it must be politically neutral, which effectively means upsetting the far right and the far left equally,”?he wrote.
But Musk’s?posts, and the lack of scrutiny they receive from his company’s own fact-checking system,?lay bare?how Musk has turned X into a pro-Trump machine.