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Michigan priest defrocked after making apparent Nazi salute at anti-abortion summit | Michigan
A Michigan priest with the Anglican Catholic church has been removed from his position for making what appears to be a Nazi salute.
Calvin Robinson, who held the title of priest-in-charge at St Paul’s Anglican Catholic church in Grand Rapids, Michigan, performed the gesture at the end of a 25 January speech at the National Pro-Life Summit in Washington DC. The priest appeared to quote Elon Musk, saying, “My heart goes out to you,” before mimicking his straight-arm motion.
According to a statement on the Anglican Catholic church’s website, Robinson’s license in the church was subsequently revoked and he will no longer serve as a priest.
“We believe that those who mimic the Nazi salute, even as a joke or an attempt to troll their opponents, trivialize the horror of the Holocaust and diminish the sacrifice of those who fought against its perpetrators,” the statement reads. “Such actions are harmful, divisive, and contrary to the tenets of Christian charity.”
Robinson posted a statement on his Facebook page on Wednesday defending the gesture as “a joke” in “mockery of the hysterical ‘liberals’ who called Elon Musk a Nazi for quite clearly showing the audience his heart was with them”.
“For the record, in case it needs saying: I am not a Nazi,” he wrote.
He went on to describe his attempt at humor as being “dry wit, in that typical British way” and that the gesture was “not a joke at the expense of WWII, nor an admission of my membership in the Nationalist Socialist Party. That would be an incredibly ignorant and bad faith assumption to make.”
Immediately after video of the incident went viral, comparisons to Elon Musk’s apparent fascist gestures at Trump’s inauguration were made.
Musk went on to make jokes about the gesture and Nazism on his social media platform X that many found in poor taste. Last week, Musk made a surprise appearance at a German far-right rally where he encouraged people to “move beyond” the guilt of past actions, apparently referring to the Holocaust.
“It’s good to be proud of German culture, German values, and not to lose that in some sort of multiculturalism that dilutes everything,” Musk said.
In a shocking turn of events, a Michigan priest has been defrocked after making an apparent Nazi salute at an anti-abortion summit. The incident occurred at a conference where the priest was speaking about the importance of protecting the sanctity of life.The gesture, which has long been associated with the Nazi regime and its ideology of hate and violence, sparked outrage among attendees and led to the priest’s swift removal from his position within the church.
In a statement, the Archdiocese of Michigan condemned the priest’s actions as “completely unacceptable and incompatible with the values of our faith.” The decision to defrock him was made in order to uphold the integrity of the church and ensure that such behavior is not tolerated.
The incident serves as a stark reminder of the dangers of extremism and the importance of standing up against hate in all its forms. It also highlights the need for greater vigilance in monitoring the actions and beliefs of those in positions of authority, particularly within religious institutions.
As the community grapples with the fallout from this shocking incident, it is essential that we come together to reject hatred and promote understanding and compassion towards all. Only by standing united against intolerance can we ensure a more peaceful and inclusive society for all.
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Elon Musk’s call for Germany to ‘move beyond’ Nazi guilt is dangerous, Holocaust memorial chair says
The chairman of Israel’s official Holocaust memorial has accused Elon Musk of insulting the victims of Nazism and endangering Germany’s democratic future after the billionaire addressed a rally for Germany’s far-right party on Saturday.
Musk, the world’s richest man, made a surprise virtual appearance at a campaign event for Germany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party on Saturday, doubling down on his support for the group he has said can “save Germany” ahead of snap elections in February.
In an apparent reference to Germany’s Nazi history, the head of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, whose smiling face was projected onto a vast screen, told a roaring crowd that “children should not be guilty of the sins of their parents, let alone their great-grandparents.”
“There is too much focus on past guilt, and we need to move beyond that,” he added at the rally in the eastern German city of Halle.
Musk’s remarks, which came the same week that he faced criticism for a gesture during a speech in Washington that many people said resembled a Nazi salute, came two days before world leaders are due to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.
“The remembrance and acknowledgement of the dark past of the country and its people should be central in shaping the German society,” said Dani Dayan, chairman of Yad Vashem, Israel’s memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, in a post on X.
“Failing to do so is an insult to the victims of Nazism and a clear danger to the democratic future of Germany,” he added.
Musk has openly supported numerous hard-right causes in Europe, including the anti-immigrant AfD, which last year became the first far-right party to win a state election in Germany since World War II.
Moving past guilt over the atrocities of Germany’s Nazi era is a key pillar of the AfD’s platform.
In echoing the party’s attitude to Germany’s past — a point of view that has drawn outrage inside Germany and abroad — the tech billionaire threw his support behind a party whose co-founder Alexander Gauland once dismissed the Nazi era as “just a speck of bird’s muck in more than 1,000 years of successful German history.”
The AfD denies being extremist, although its leaders have said that Germany should stop apologizing for the Holocaust and the Third Reich.
Musk greets Donald Trump at the launch of the SpaceX Starship rocket in Texas in November.Brandon Bell / Getty Images The timing of Musk’s appearance at the AfD rally was also notable in that it came just days after he made a gesture in Washington that sparked widespread condemnation.
Abraham Foxman, the former director of the Anti-Defamation League, said on X that Musk’s appearance in and comments at the rally, just days after his speech in Washington, “help place the hand gesture in perspective.”
Foxman’s comments on Musk’s actions came in contrast to those of the ADL’s current leadership.
The ADL defended Musk after the gesture, suggesting on X — the social media platform that Musk owns — that the billionaire had made an “awkward gesture in a moment of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute.”
“In this moment, all sides should give one another a bit of grace, perhaps even the benefit of the doubt, and take a breath,” it said.
In his own attempt to downplay the allegations, Musk posted a joke referencing names of prominent Nazi leaders on X, also sparking a backlash.
The ADL’s chief executive, Jonathan Greenblatt, responded on the same platform saying that “the Holocaust is not a joke.”
Musk’s comments at the AfD’s rally also played into familiar AfD talking points on national identity and immigration.
Alice Weidel, co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany party, in Berlin before a live discussion with Elon Musk on X on Jan. 9.Kay Nietfeld / AFP – Getty Images “It’s good to be proud of German culture, German values, and not to lose that in some sort of multiculturalism that dilutes everything,” Musk said.
The AfD has successfully used Germany’s debate over immigration to bolster its popularity. The party adopted an explicitly anti-Islam policy in May 2016, and its 2017 election manifesto included a section on why “Islam does not belong to Germany.”
The topic of immigration was one of many Musk discussed during an X broadcast earlier this month in which he spent more than an hour speaking with AfD co-leader Alice Weidel.
As he has become increasingly vocal about his apparent move to the right of the political spectrum, Musk has thrown his support behind numerous right-wing causes, including the United Kingdom’s hard-right Reform UK party and Italy’s far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, calling her a “precious genius.”
But his most zealous support has been for the AfD, which heads into February’s elections polling in second place after the collapse of Germany’s left-led coalition government.
While other German political parties have refused to join coalitions with the AfD due to its extreme positions, Musk has given the group a significant boost, most notably — before Saturday at least — with his X interview with Weidel.
In the conversation, Weidel said that AfD is “exactly the opposite” of Adolf Hitler’s party, adding that it’s Europe’s left-wing political parties who are antisemitic.
“We are wrongly framed the entire time,” she said.
Elon Musk’s recent comments calling for Germany to “move beyond” its guilt over the Holocaust have sparked outrage and condemnation from Holocaust memorial chairpersons and historians. In a series of tweets, the Tesla CEO and SpaceX founder suggested that Germany should not dwell on its past atrocities and instead focus on building a better future.These remarks have been met with fierce criticism, with many arguing that they trivialize the horrors of the Holocaust and demonstrate a lack of understanding of the importance of remembering and acknowledging the past. Dr. Charlotte Knobloch, the chair of the Munich Jewish community and former president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, called Musk’s comments “dangerous and deeply troubling.”
Knobloch emphasized the need for Germany to continue to confront its history and ensure that the memory of the Holocaust is preserved for future generations. She warned against attempts to downplay or dismiss the atrocities of the past, stating that doing so could pave the way for history to repeat itself.
Musk’s remarks have also been criticized for their insensitivity and lack of empathy towards the millions of victims of the Holocaust. Many have pointed out that Germany’s commitment to remembering and learning from its past is crucial in preventing similar atrocities from happening in the future.
In light of the backlash, Musk has since clarified his comments, stating that he was not trying to minimize the significance of the Holocaust but rather advocating for a focus on progress and innovation. However, his initial remarks continue to be seen as problematic and divisive.
Overall, Musk’s call for Germany to “move beyond” its Nazi guilt has ignited a heated debate about the importance of remembering and learning from history, and the dangers of forgetting the past. It serves as a stark reminder of the ongoing need to confront the atrocities of the past and ensure that they are never repeated.
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Saturday Night Live has taken a swift aim at Elon Musk, following the Tesla CEO’s controversial salute towards Donald Trump on inauguration day that many have deemed fascist.
Musk, 53, was heavily criticised, including pushback from his own family, after he touched his chest and raised his right arm towards the sky as a gesture of thanks to Trump. He then repeated the salute just seconds later.
During the 26 January episode of SNL, Weekend Update host Michael Che mocked Musk for the salute, once again drawing comparisons to the Nazis and Musk’s own Tesla brand.
“Elon Musk was criticised for his speech at a rally after the inauguration in which he appears to give the Nazi salute. But come on, Elon Musk is not a Nazi,” Che said of the man behind the much maligned Cybertruck. “The Nazis made nice cars,” quipped Che, referencing the origins of Volkswagen.
Musk previously responded to the widespread criticism, and rather than denying it was a Nazi salute, he instead said his critics needed “better dirty tricks” because comparing their political opponents to Adolf Hitler is “sooo tired”.
Elon Musk (AFP via Getty Images) Musk’s Tesla company has become a target for his critics following the salute scandal.
The owner of a Cybertruck that was vandalised with the word “Nazi” says she believes the offensive graffiti was targeted at Musk.
Amanda Lopez-Lara, from the Bay Area, California, said that following the recent controversy surrounding the tech billionaire, the incident was unlikely to be a “coincidence”.
Meanwhile, the British activist group, Led By Donkeys, projected an image of Musk’s salute onto Tesla’s Berlin Gigafactory, accompanied by the phrase “Heil Tesla”. The group, along with Germany’s Centre for Political Beauty, accuse Musk of using his wealth to “degrade democracy”.
Led by Donkeys teamed up with German activist group Center for Political Beauty to project the image of Elon Musk on a Tesla Gigafactory in Berlin, Germany (Led By Donkeys) It comes after SNL’s Chloe Fineman admitted that she had “no regrets” for calling out Musk after he allegedly made her cry when he hosted the show in 2021.
“Remember when I got in trouble for calling out Mr Nazi Salute?” the comedian shared in a Tuesday (21 January) Instagram Story. “Ya no regrets.”
Last November, Fineman, 36, alleged that the Tesla billionaire, who hosted the show in May 2021, brought her to tears after telling her that her script wasn’t funny.
“SNL Comedian Debunks Elon Musk Nazi Rumors with Five Simple Words”
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#SNL #comedian #words #explain #Elon #Musk #Nazi‘SNL’ Weekend Update Trashes Trump’s Inauguration, ‘Nazi’ Musk Salute
Saturday Night Live‘s Weekend Update addressed Donald Trump‘s second inauguration, his dozens of controversial executive orders, and the salute by Elon Musk that has neo-Nazis and white nationalists overjoyed.
Co-anchor Colin Jost noted that during his oath, Trump was seen not placing his hand on the Lincoln Bible.
“Well, he tried to,” Jost said, “but the Bible screamed.”
“During his address, President Trump said he was changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America,” Jost went on. “And, like you, Hillary Clinton could be seen in the background laughing while he said it, while Kamala could be seen silently begging her edible to kick in.”
Michael Che then addressed Trump’s pardoning and commutations of about 1,500 Jan. 6 rioters–among them Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, who had been convicted of seditious conspiracy and was serving an 18-year sentence.
“And ladies, just like his eyes, he’s single!” Che said of Rhodes, who wears an eye patch.
“President Trump defended his pardon of the January 6 attackers, saying that these are just people that love their country,” Che continued. “You know, like how O.J. loved Nicole.”
Jost addressed another of Trump’s executive actions: directing the federal government to end diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs.
“Worse,” Jost joked, “the order began, ‘Listen up, gaywads.’”
Che also weighed in on Musk’s straight-arm salute, which many are interpreting as a “Sieg Heil.”
“Elon Musk was criticized for his speech at a rally after the inauguration in which he appears to give the Nazi salute. But come on, Elon Musk is not a Nazi,” Che said of the man behind the Tesla Cybertruck. “The Nazis made nice cars.”
Jost followed that up by commenting on the White House posting photos on social media of migrants boarding military planes to be deported.
“And Trump said the deportations won’t stop until a white kid wins the Spelling Bee,” Jost joked.
In a recent episode of Saturday Night Live, the Weekend Update segment took aim at former President Donald Trump’s inauguration and controversial entrepreneur Elon Musk’s recent actions.The segment began with host Colin Jost joking about Trump’s underwhelming inauguration crowd size, quipping, “It was so empty, even the Russians were like, ‘Is this a protest?’”
But the real burn came when Jost turned his attention to Elon Musk, who has been facing backlash for his recent comments and actions. Jost mocked Musk for his “Nazi” salute at a recent event, saying, “I guess when you’re worth billions, you can afford to buy some tact.”
The segment has been met with mixed reactions, with some viewers praising SNL for calling out Trump and Musk, while others criticized the show for being too political. Regardless, it’s clear that SNL’s Weekend Update isn’t afraid to take on controversial topics and personalities.
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Elon Musk addresses German far-right rally by video link, amid ‘Nazi salute’ controversy
US tech billionaire Elon Musk gave a video address to a campaign rally of Germany’s anti-immigration AfD party Saturday, his latest show of support ahead of the country’s election next month.
Musk told a gathering of thousands of AfD supporters in the eastern city of Halle that their party was “the best hope for the future of Germany”.
Musk has raised concern from some mainstream leaders who have accused him of interfering in European politics with comments on his social platform X about politicians in countries including Germany and Britain.
He also drew criticism this week for making a public hand gesture that was seen by some as resembling a straight-armed Nazi salute.
“The German people are really an ancient nation which goes back thousand of years,” he said in Saturday’s address.
“I even read Julius Caesar was very impressed [by] the German tribes,” he said, urging the supporters to “fight, fight, fight” for their country’s future.
Elon Musk’s Strong Message to German Far-Right Rally: We Stand Against HateElon Musk recently made headlines when he addressed a German far-right rally via video link, amidst a controversial incident involving Nazi salutes. The Tesla CEO delivered a powerful message denouncing hate and discrimination, urging unity and understanding among all people.
In his address, Musk emphasized the importance of tolerance and acceptance, stating that “hate has no place in our society.” He went on to condemn the use of Nazi symbols and gestures, calling them “abhorrent and unacceptable.”
The incident in question occurred when a small group of individuals at the rally were seen making Nazi salutes, sparking outrage and condemnation from officials and the public alike. Musk’s decision to speak out against such behavior further underscored his commitment to promoting inclusivity and diversity.
As the leader of a global technology company, Musk’s words carry weight and influence. By taking a stand against hate, he sends a clear message that discrimination and bigotry will not be tolerated in any form.
In a time when divisive rhetoric and extremist ideologies are on the rise, Musk’s bold stance serves as a reminder that we must all do our part to promote peace and understanding. Let us heed his words and work together to create a more tolerant and compassionate world for all.
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#Elon #Musk #addresses #German #farright #rally #video #link #Nazi #salute #controversyElon Musk’s Nazi salute controversy reveals a collapse in American morality
Since Donald Trump’s rise to power, some liberals have developed a bad habit of seeing secret Nazi imagery everywhere on the right.
Be it Laura Ingraham allegedly sieg-heiling at the 2016 Republican National Convention, a Justice Brett Kavanaugh clerk being called a covert white supremacist in 2018 because of her resting hand position, or concerns that the furniture at a 2021 conservative conference was arranged in the shape of a Nazi division’s emblem, these charges almost always end up looking kind of absurd.
So when I say that Elon Musk gave a Nazi salute at Trump’s inauguration on Monday, I am doing so only because I can see no other plausible interpretation of his gesture.
I watched the footage from as many angles as I could find. He stuck his arm straight out, palm down, and pointed it toward the crowd in a gesture of tribute. He put his hand on his heart first, a variant of the Adolf Hitler salute popularized in American History X — a critical film about neo-Nazism that some on the far-right have reclaimed as a celebration. And he did it twice.
If that’s what you saw — well, I’m with you. And it’s what neo-Nazis themselves saw; Nick Fuentes, the Hitler admirer who dined with Trump in 2022, described Musk’s gesture as “a straight-up sieg heil, like loving Hitler energy.”
But maybe you saw things differently.
Maybe, like the Washington Post’s Megan McArdle, you are inclined to give Musk the benefit of the doubt — suggesting that he was merely trying to mime his heart going out to the crowd. Maybe you’re skeptical of viral video clips on principle, a reasonable attitude given how easy they are to edit deceptively. Maybe you think we ultimately can’t know what’s in someone’s heart, and it’s not worth trying to guess — especially given Musk’s dismissal of the charges.
But whatever you believe was in Musk’s heart on Monday, you can see why many of us would be leery of giving him the benefit of the doubt.
Musk has a long and extensive track record of extreme-right politics, flirtations with antisemitism, and juvenile trolling. This assessment does not hinge entirely on one gesture but on the totality of his public behavior. Just a few years ago, someone this radical wouldn’t be anywhere near a presidential inauguration.
Musk’s presence there, and his ability to avoid even a hint of contrition for doing something that emboldens America’s neo-Nazis, is a sign of a deeper rot.
Since Trump has risen to power, Americans’ shared notion of public morals — the idea that there are certain standards for conduct that shouldn’t be transgressed — have been blown to bits. Some of those standards, like strong prohibitions on doing anything that even resembles an endorsement of Nazism, are some of our most important bulwarks against a return to the worst political moments in modern humanity’s long collective history.
And that, more than anything else, is why what Musk did — both from that stage and long before — matters. Even if leaders and elites have abandoned any pretensions to a moral code, we as citizens still need to insist on it. Instead, even institutions created to banish bigotry and contain cruelty are bending the knee.
We don’t need a Hitler salute to know who Elon Musk is
It’s true that Elon Musk has done some things, like visiting Auschwitz, that one wouldn’t expect from someone who would heil Hitler in public. But when you look at his public record in totality, the pattern is unmistakable — and disturbing.
After purchasing Twitter in 2022, Musk personally intervened to restore Fuentes and others like him, who had been banned by the platform’s previous owners. Two 2023 data analyses found that the amount of antisemitic content on Twitter, now X, doubled after Musk’s purchase. A 2024 NBC investigation reported that Musk’s choices allowed antisemitism and neo-Nazism to “flourish” on the platform, identifying hundreds of neo-Nazi accounts gaining in influence under Musk’s new policies.
While his initial justification was that these views are easier to combat when debated publicly, it quickly became clear that he actually agreed with some of what they had to say.
The most infamous example came when Musk replied approvingly to a nakedly antisemitic tweet. The original poster accused Jews of pushing “dialectical hatred against whites,” adding that he was “deeply disinterested in giving the tiniest shit now about western Jewish populations coming to the disturbing realization that those hordes of minorities that support flooding their country don’t exactly like them too much.”
Musk told this person that “you have said the actual truth.” He then went on to attack the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a Jewish anti-hate group, for “unjustly attack[ing] the majority of the West.” He ultimately apologized and visited Auschwitz to demonstrate that he had learned.
Yet there are plenty of other examples afterward of Musk interacting with or promoting antisemitic or neo-Nazi content.
He, for example, amplified a post accusing Jews of supporting censorship. He praised two separate Tucker Carlson interviews with troubling content — one featuring a Hitler apologist and the other airing conspiracy theories about Israeli control over US foreign policy. And he once accused the billionaire Holocaust survivor George Soros of “hating humanity,” comparing Soros to Magneto — the Jewish X-Men villain whose hatred of humanity arose from his experience in a death camp.
In the past few weeks, Musk has used his platform on X to repeatedly and loudly advance Germany’s far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party. The AfD is extreme even by the standards of the European far-right: Some of its members tried to storm the German parliament in 2020, January 6-style, while a former AfD member of parliament was arrested in 2022 for plotting an actual coup. The party is virulently opposed to immigration; its leader Alice Weidel recently called for “remigration” — a mass deportation campaign that could potentially target even legal residents of minority backgrounds. Another leading party figure, Björn Höcke, has called for an end to German guilt over Nazism and used a Nazi slogan in one of his speeches.
The International Auschwitz Committee, a German anti-hate group founded by Holocaust survivors, has repeatedly warned about the party’s dangers.
“With every year of its existence, the AfD has become increasingly cynical and extreme. As a result, it has contributed to a huge level of radicalisation in language and in the extreme far right as a whole in Germany,” Christoph Heubner, the committee’s executive vice president, said in a 2023 press release. “MPs and representatives of the AfD repeatedly trigger disconcerting memories in the survivors of the German concentration and extermination camps with their speeches and public performances.”
So do the many examples of Musk supporting neo-Nazis and promoting their ideas make him a dyed-in-the-wool Nazi, one who simply revealed his true colors at Trump’s inauguration? We can’t tell what’s in his heart, of course, but I think there’s a likely explanation.
We know that Elon Musk has genuinely far-right politics and that he marinades in an online information environment rife with conspiracy theories. We also know that he delights in trolling.
He is willing to pursue these interests even in ways that damage his business. Think about X’s plummeting ad revenues after Musk platformed extremists. Or how he triggered an SEC lawsuit after vowing to take Tesla private at $420 a share (weed jokes, they’re hilarious). Or how, in the midst of a fight with Twitter’s corporate landlord, he repainted the sign to read “Titter” (boob jokes, they’re hilarious).
Elon Musk is many things: a brilliant entrepreneur, the world’s richest man, and a genuinely dangerous political extremist. But he also has a juvenile sense of humor and an adolescent love of transgressing against liberal America’s taboos. He is human South Park.
Such a person could sincerely hold Nazi beliefs. But he could just as easily find joy in making an obvious Nazi gesture on a national stage and then denying it, knowing full well that there would be no serious cost to his actions.
A Thursday morning tweet containing a series of Nazi puns relating to the salute controversy — “Don’t say Hess to Nazi accusations,” “Some people will Goebbels anything down” — makes this all too easy to imagine.
Musk, manners, and the execrable “vibe shift”
It used to be that something like what Musk pulled — a gesture that perfectly mimicked a Nazi salute, intentionally or not — would necessitate some kind of apology. Something along the lines of “Of course I didn’t mean to heil Hitler, and I’m sorry for the hurt this caused to the victims of Nazism and their descendants.”
That’s not what Musk has done. Since Monday, he has gone on the offensive — calling the media propagandists and trying to shift to a debate over liberals’ position on Israel. There’s no contrition, no sense of embarrassment: just utter and complete shamelessness.
This is, of course, one of the defining traits of the Trump era of politics. But what’s striking is that, since Trump’s reelection, the institutions that are supposed to push back on this have kissed the ring.
Take the ADL, which had previously done so much to expose the rise of extremism after Musk’s purchase of Twitter and called him out for flirtations with white supremacy. It got so heated that Musk blamed the ADL directly for X’s loss in revenue and repeatedly threatened to sue them.
The ADL has retained a very low tolerance for public displays of antisemitism since then. After the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, it has been quite clearly overzealous in that regard, pursuing pro-Palestinian college students for behavior far less troubling (like handing out anti-Zionist flyers) than what Musk just did.
Yet after the inauguration, the group issued a statement basically giving Musk a hall pass for performing “an awkward gesture.” It did so, in large part, because we are in the midst of “a new beginning” for American politics in which “all sides should give one another a bit of grace.”
Even though the ADL found some spine on Thursday and criticized Musk for the Nazi jokes, the initial statement was capitulation of a particularly notable kind. It was a response to the much-heralded “vibe shift,” a sense that culture has shifted in Trump’s direction after his victory and that the rest of society needs to accommodate his faction. That it’s now realized it went too far, and is going after him for the much lesser offense of making Nazi leaders’ names into puns, does not diminish the severity of its original mistake.
You can see this mindset at work in another exchange about Musk. When Congress member Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez accused Musk of doing a “Nazi salute,” leading right-wing activist Chris Rufo responded by saying that the time for such allegations is over.
“They still think if they shout ‘racist’ and ‘Nazi’ loud enough, the entire society will bend to their narcissism and manipulation. No. It’s not 2020 anymore,” he said.
Both the ADL and Rufo, in very different ways, are showing why we shouldn’t give Musk’s boorish behavior a pass.
The truth is that Musk has a public record of sympathy for odious views, and has shown zero contrition about making a gesture that looked exactly like a Nazi salute. Criticizing him for it is not uncivil or impolite; it is a way to assert that there are real moral standards, certain lines that shouldn’t be crossed by people in positions of power.
The Trump era “vibe shift” isn’t merely a move to the right. It’s a move away from accountability and toward a culture where people get away with meanness, cruelty, and gratuitous insults against the vulnerable. As an anonymous banker put it: “We can say ‘retard’ and ‘pussy’ without the fear of getting cancelled . . . it’s a new dawn.”
At moments like these, collectively insisting on standards is all the more important. One of those standards is that you should not be able to get away with performing a Nazi gesture, intentionally or not, without apologizing like you mean it. Another is that someone with Musk’s record of promoting far-right ideas and approvingly conversing with neo-Nazis should never have been on the inaugural stage to begin with. This is one of the bulwarks we have, as a society, to prevent honest-to-goodness Nazism from reentering the zone of political acceptability.
Yet Musk and Trump have made blurring those moral lines part of their life’s work. I fear we are all about to suffer the consequences — to live in a world where it becomes even more acceptable to openly perform nastiness and extremism. We may enter the world prophesied by philosopher Richard Rorty in 1998, where a far-right backlash brings “all the sadism” we once considered “unacceptable” in public life “flooding back.”
If that indeed comes to pass, the future of American politics is one in which Musk’s ugly display on Monday ends up looking like a dance recital.
Recently, Tesla CEO Elon Musk found himself in hot water after a video surfaced of him making a Nazi salute during a conference call. The controversial gesture has sparked outrage and condemnation from many, with critics pointing out that such actions are not only offensive but also indicative of a larger problem in American society.Musk’s behavior has raised questions about his judgment and character, with some calling for him to step down from his position at Tesla. The incident has also reignited discussions about the rise of extremism and hate speech in the United States, as well as the need for greater accountability among public figures.
The fact that someone as influential and successful as Musk would engage in such a gesture is troubling, to say the least. It serves as a stark reminder of the erosion of moral values in American society and the normalization of hateful ideologies.
In a time when political polarization and social division are at an all-time high, it is more important than ever for individuals in positions of power to lead by example and promote inclusivity, tolerance, and respect. Musk’s actions have only further highlighted the urgent need for a collective reassessment of our values and priorities as a nation.
Ultimately, the controversy surrounding Elon Musk’s Nazi salute serves as a wake-up call for all Americans to reflect on the state of our morality and to strive for a more compassionate and just society. It is a reminder that we must actively work to combat hate and intolerance in all its forms, lest we continue down a dangerous path towards further division and discord.
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Elon Musk, Nazi salute, controversy, American morality, ethics, Tesla CEO, social media backlash, cultural sensitivity, historical context, public image, online reputation management
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