After Elon Musk kicked up a controversy over his backing of an anti-Semitic post, analysts debated about how the crisis would play out.
What Happened: There is an “ongoing career death watch” for Musk, which hasn’t gone too far and for 52 years, there has not been any sanctions, said crisis management guru Eric Dezenhall in an interview with CNBC on Friday. His reaction to the controversy would be based on what he thinks about whether the whole unsavory will pose a danger to X, Tesla, Inc. TSLA or SpaceX, he said. If the billionaire thinks, it is more of the same, he will continue, he added.
Alternatively, if Musk personally feels the peril, he will begin processing which of the issues he should apologize for, when to apologize and when to establish rules and policies to prevent this sort of development, Dezenhall said. “But there is no sign really that, that is where they are yet,” he added.
It’s tough to advise people like Musk, who thinks they are consistently right when everybody else says you are wrong, the chairman of Dezenhall Resources said. What happens is that the people around the person try to dive in front of the bullets to take it, he said, referring to X CEO Linda Yaccarino facing the heat for Musk’s misstep.
See Also: Everything You Need To Know About Tesla Stock
Why It’s Important: Following Musk’s comments several advertisers including Apple, IBM and NBCUniversal and its parent Comcast have all decided to pull out advertisements from the X platform. This could put the social media company’s revenue under further pressure.
Musk, on his part, justified his stance. In a post on X, Musk said, “This past week, there were hundreds of bogus media stories claiming that I am antisemitic. Nothing could be further from the truth.”
“I wish only the best for humanity and a prosperous and exciting future for all.”
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