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Even if Elon Musk never takes ownership of Twitter, he has done us all a great service. We now know what Twitter truly stands for: control of your speech.
The board of directors were between a rock and a hard place when Elon Musk offered to buy Twitter to open up free speech. Hilariously, Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who apparently was speaking on behalf of his shares, declined that offer. Musk then poked him right back.
Interesting. Just two questions, if I may.
How much of Twitter does the Kingdom own, directly & indirectly?
What are the Kingdom’s views on journalistic freedom of speech?
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 14, 2022
Jamal Khashoggi, anyone? Hmmmm? And good question about that number of shares owned by Saudi Arabia, because a brilliant thread by Jeff Carlson brought up this point:
Another question I have is for @Alwaleed_Talal and the @SECGov
Yesterday you said "Being one of the largest & long-term shareholders of Twitter, @Kingdom_KHC & I reject this offer."
Odd as you don't show as a holder.
Your claim moved Twitter stock materially. Do u still own?
— Jeff Carlson (@themarketswork) April 15, 2022
The masks are falling off all over the place. And Twitter, in a hope of holding together the board’s control of the company, opted for the “poison pill.”
Update: And now we know why they were waiting. A Poison Pill has just dropped into the milk … https://t.co/0sTlny5eIL pic.twitter.com/xolgGF4DmC
— Rasmussen Reports (@Rasmussen_Poll) April 15, 2022
But what is a “poison pill” in this case? Essentially, this is a targeted attempt to keep Elon Musk from buying up Twitter, which can last for one year.
The move would allow existing Twitter shareholders — except for Musk — to buy additional shares at a discount, thereby diluting Musk’s stake in the company and making it harder for him to corral a majority of shareholder votes in favor of the acquisition.”
Twitter’s plan would take effect if Musk’s roughly 9% stake grows to 15% or more.”
The poison pill injects another twist into a melodrama surrounding the possibility of the world’s richest person taking over a social media platform he described Thursday as the world’s “de facto town square.”
Twitter said its plan would reduce the likelihood that any one person can gain control of the company without either paying shareholders a premium or giving the board more time to evaluate an offer. Such defenses, formally called shareholder rights plans, are used to prevent the hostile takeover of a corporation by making any acquisition prohibitively expensive for the bidder.”
Even if it discourages his takeover attempt, Musk could still take over the company by waging a “proxy fight” in which shareholders vote to retain or dismiss the company’s current directors. Twitter said its plan doesn’t prevent the board from negotiating or accepting an acquisition proposal if it’s in the company’s best interests.”
“They’re gearing up for a battle here with Musk,” said Daniel Ives, an analyst for Wedbush Securities. “They also have to give themselves time to try to find another potential buyer.”
Hey, maybe the Saudi prince wants to buy up Twitter. I mean, what could possibly go wrong???
Now, Elon Musk is not going to just give up – at least, it doesn’t seem that he will.
Asked by TED’s Chris Anderson if there was a “Plan B” if his current offer were rejected, Musk said, “there is.”
He declined to elaborate.”
However, Musk’s “Plan B” was floated before Twitter decided to take the “poison pill.” Who knows what “Plan B” looks like now.
Regardless of what happens next, it has become obvious that Twitter doesn’t want free speech. As the left hysterically bleated yesterday, they depend on Twitter being the censors of the speech they don’t like, so that only their approved narratives can go forth. This was noted by multiple people from Jonathan Turley to Glenn Greenwald to the aforementioned Jeff Carlson. Twitter would rather freeze itself for a year, short the shareholders of seeing any kind of rise in value for what they own, risk a lawsuit from Musk himself to overturn the “poison pill,” than concede that maybe they are in need of SERIOUS reform when it comes to free speech. All those blue checks melting down about how they need MORE censorship, not LESS, in order to save “democracy” – that is exactly the perspective of the board of directors right now.
So, even if Elon Musk doesn’t own Twitter, he did us all a favor. The man behind the curtain has been revealed, and Twitter is only invested in their speech, not yours. If you believe in free speech, act accordingly.
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Musk may have a couple of “Plan B”s, depending on what the .gov does to prevent him from buying Twitter. If it is obvious enough, then he or someone else may sue, alleging that Twitters’ censorship is .gov action, subject to 1st A challenges.
In the alternate, before Musk bought shares, Twitter was at $30, with a GoldmanSachs “sell” recommendation. If, as a result of the poison pill board action, Musk sells his shares at current market, he makes money, Twitter goes back to 30, and a flood of shareholder derivative lawsuits get filed against Twitter for the economic losses incurred by not selling at $54.
There my be more / others, as there are many people smarter and more knowledgeable than I.
It sounds to me like the Twitter board opened themselves up to a lawsuit from a lot of people who would have been perfectly happy with a 20 percent premium on their shares. They are supposed to have a fiduciary duty to the stockholders.
Last two sentences: “The man behind the curtain has been revealed, and Twitter is only invested in their speech, not yours. If you believe in free speech, act accordingly.” Why do people feel like this is a new revelation? Who wasn’t already aware of this? I mean, seriously, even the few lefties I have talked about twitter with are aware of this and that is what they love about twitter (hence their fear). I left twitter years ago when it became obvious that twitter was censoring only one way.
[…] board of directors, in order to buy the company. Twitter instead opted for the “poison pill” strategy to protect themselves. And when I say “themselves” I mean the board of […]
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