Elon Musk slams coronavirus lockdowns: ‘FREE AMERICA NOW’

Billionaire Tesla boss Elon Musk lashed out Wednesday at lockdowns meant to include the coronavirus in a sequence of early-morning Twitter posts echoing calls from protesters across the US.


“FREE AMERICA NOW,” Musk  tweeted at 2:15 a.m.


The 48-year-old tech tycoon crowed “Bravo Texas!” in an earlier put up hailing the Lone Star State for transferring to reopen eating places and retail shops this week. His reward got here every week after Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick stated the state ought to raise restrictions as a result of “there are extra necessary issues than residing.”


Musk additionally shared a Sunday op-ed in The Wall Avenue Journal arguing that extreme shutdowns haven't helped save many lives.


“Give individuals their freedom again!” Musk wrote.


Musk’s missives adopted protests in a number of states urging officers to raise lockdown measures which have pressured enterprise to shut and put thousands and thousands of employees on the unemployment rolls. President Trump just lately voiced help for the largely conservative protesters by calling on officers to “liberate” Minnesota, Michigan and Virginia.


Musk has expressed skepticism in regards to the coronavirus for weeks although it has sickened greater than 3.1 million individuals and killed greater than 217,000 individuals worldwide, in accordance with a Johns Hopkins College tally.


Musk referred to as panic in regards to the virus “dumb” in early March and later falsely claimed that kids are “basically immune” to the illness. He additionally wrongly predicted final month that the US would most likely see “near zero new circumstances” by the top of April; greater than 24,000 US circumstances have been reported on Tuesday alone, Johns Hopkins says.


Tesla, Musk’s $141 billion electric-car firm, has reportedly requested some employees to return to its California manufacturing unit this week although the Bay Space has but to raise a lockdown that pressured it to halt manufacturing. Musk can be closing in on a $750 million payday whereas Tesla’s hourly employees confronted furloughs.



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