Musk has allowed ego and bravado to get in the way of old-fashioned common sense
Anointing yourself the guardian of free speech is one thing. Living up to it is something else altogether, as Elon Musk is quickly discovering.
It’s been a week since the Tesla tycoon took over Twitter and already it looks like the entire thing is in danger of coming apart at the seams.
Having fired the entire board – a hasty act, even for someone as impulsive as Musk – it is surely beginning to dawn on him that there will be no quick fixes in his effort to prevent the $44bn (£39bn) buyout turning into one of the worst deals of all time.
Sacking the executives who had held Musk to a bid he tried to wriggle out of was the easy part. Everything else that has been floated as a magic solution to Twitter’s enduring problems amounts to little more than throwing darts at the wall. He has even resorted to crowd-sourcing business ideas, a pretty clear sign that he is short of his own.