This happens a lot in the comics that Elon Musk loves

Access updated Telemarketing Data for B2B & B2C. Connect with real prospects and maximize your call center performance.
Post Reply
relemedf5w023
Posts: 432
Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 7:17 am

This happens a lot in the comics that Elon Musk loves

Post by relemedf5w023 »

Elon Musk stole the show from Donald Trump on his first day in the White House. Instead of discussing the executive orders signed by the new US president, everyone is discussing why Musk accompanied his speech at Trump's inauguration with a "sieg heil" - a gesture reminiscent of the Nazi salute. Is Musk a Nazi, too? Ukrainians think so.




A gifted boy with poor health and a photographic memory is bullied by his peers at school. He becomes embittered and dreams of taking power over the entire planet in order to take revenge. To achieve this, he climbs two career ladders in parallel. For the public, he is a successful entrepreneur, scientist, philanthropist and politician, but at the same time, he is a high-ranking member of a secret Nazi order that was preparing revenge somewhere in the ice of Greenland and the pampas of Argentina after the evacuation from Berlin in 1945. The sickly boy became the richest man in the world and the executor of the US President . He almost succeeded, but at the moment of triumph at the ceremony, he became emotional, relaxed, gave a triumphant Nazi salute - and thereby gave himself away, nullifying many years of conspiracy.

The plot follows Musk's biography at least at the beginning and end: he is the same sickly boy who, at the inauguration of the 47th US president, made something that looks very much like a Nazi salute.

But whether Musk is a covert Nazi or was simply bitten by mint database West is a matter of differing opinions.

When the world's richest man salutes the inauguration of the world's most powerful man, is it a misunderstanding, an accident, or a reason to be nervous? There are three explanations for what happened, one for each of them.

Version #1
According to the explanation favored by patriotic Americans among Musk's fans , it was not a "ziga" but a gesture accompanying the oath to the US flag in its classic form.

This gesture entered American history under the name "Bellamy salute" - after the author of the oath, which appeared at the end of the 19th century and was introduced into circulation first in scout organizations, and then in schools. There was a time when young Americans saluted like this everywhere and almost every day, now the status of the oath varies from state to state: in some places it is pronounced, in others it is left to the discretion of schools, and in some places it has already been recognized as undesirable.
Post Reply