Twitter locks staff out of offices until next week
It comes amid reports that large numbers of workers have resigned from the social media platform.
www.bbc.com
There are suggestions that the lenders will call the debt and put Twitter into receivership, which includes installing their own board of directors and ousting Musk. A non-drama-driven, let's-get-back-to-running-a-business board would be welcome.I think it could survive. But it will bleed money until it can right the ship. Musk came in and figuratively shit the bed. He immediately alienated the workers, many users AND advertisers. Last I heard, the company (based on lenders trying to sell the debt) is valued at about $8B, a 82% drop. And that was last week. Lord knows what its worth now.
In my eyes, Musk could still turn this around. But he started out so tone deaf and flat footed that it will be a major uphill battle. Will he have the taste to spend billions more to rebuild this or will he walk away?
My other questions, which I posted in another thread is, will Musk survive as CEO of Tesla? The company's stock has been tarnished by this fiasco, and Musk's business acumen must seriously be questioned at this point. If he can destroy a company like Twitter's value in three weeks, what could he do to Tesla if he starts fucking around. I wonder if the board at Tesla is pondering a life without Musk. There must be a bunch of qualified CEOs available that could take on the task without the same kind of drama that Musk has brought over the past few years.
So, as to the original question....Yes, I think it will survive, but it will be diminished for a while. Unless Musk can somehow retain the services of some people, or pay through the nose to get recruit others...But, will Twitter still be working come Monday???
I think there will be some very good motivation to create an alternative…
That transaction is so obviously bogus that the IRS would nail him.Twitter is an obvious Tax avoidance scheme by Elon. He's probably either liquidating some stake in either Tesla or Space X on which he would owe 44b in Taxes. He could tank Twitter and sell at a 43.99999b loss to his brother (since it's private now, he could sell to anyone he wants) and effectively pay $0 tax. Then, when Twitter takes off again, him/brother would get the $44b or more back if they wanted to flip it. Something alone these lines. He's even joking about bankrupting the company. Does that sound like a businessman?
These are common tactics rich people use. Singers, athletes, movie stars, rappers, anyone who's earning millions have tactics similar to this in order to pay $0 tax. They earn their income in their LLC and in reality pay less tax than a McDonald's worker on W2 payroll.
For ex, I would be completely shocked if Taylor Swift paid more tax than a McDonald's worker. I would be surprised if she recieved more than 10 W2 paystubs in her entire life.
This is Musk's problem. Once the membership goes to Mastodon, Bluesky or whoever the fuck else sets up a viable tweetery, those members have found a new home and have no reason to return to twitter.I think there will be some very good motivation to create an alternative…
Fortunately for me… I have never needed to Tweet.This is Musk's problem. Once the membership goes to Mastodon, Bluesky or whoever the fuck else sets up a viable tweetery, those members have found a new home and have no reason to return to twitter.
IRS doesn't care. It's completely legal. US tax code gives a massive legal advantage to business owners. They bribe politicians with campaign funding to have such weird tax loop holes. The most common trick for ppl less rich than him is buying mansions. I used to think those mansion owners in SoCal were such luxury loving consumers. Wrong. They buy them for tax reasons, and write off depreciation against earned income. Once the deprecation is fully maxed out, they sell the mansion for a profit (RE typically goes up) and buy a new one if they're expecting a new gig.That transaction is so obviously bogus that the IRS would nail him.
This is the main thing with starting a new network in general.This is Musk's problem. Once the membership goes to Mastodon, Bluesky or whoever the fuck else sets up a viable tweetery, those members have found a new home and have no reason to return to twitter.
Neither have I, I don’t have a Twitter account and don’t think I’m missing anything…also, I don’t have a Facebook account either.Fortunately for me… I have never needed to Tweet.
Yeah, but a fake transaction at a fake valuation to your buddy or brother is always going to be a red flag target for the IRS. RevCan would be all over that shit!IRS doesn't care. It's completely legal. US tax code gives a massive legal advantage to business owners. They bribe politicians with campaign funding to have such weird tax loop holes. The most common trick for ppl less rich than him is buying mansions. I used to think those mansion owners in SoCal were such luxury loving consumers. Wrong. They buy them for tax reasons, and write off depreciation against earned income. Once the deprecation is fully maxed out, they sell the mansion for a profit (RE typically goes up) and buy a new one if they're expecting a new gig.
This is how it works and everyone does it. Say a movie star made $40m in a year. He/She would typically owe $20m to IRS. But theyd a mansion in their LLC and write $20m in non land deprecation against their income and pay 0. Sometimes they even get credits (negative tax) for future years because they borrow to buy the mansion and get to write off interest expense too.
If you see celebrities buying mansions year in and year out and then selling and buying again and selling. That's the reason. No one needs 10 mansions like Johnny Depp or Brad Pitt. They never live in these gigantic homes. It's a tax game.