In his comments, Musk said X could have deterred the Nazis by making their mass murder “impossible to hide” and allowing “freedom of speech” against them.
Musk made the visit with EJA Chairman Rabbi Menachem Margolin, conservative US journalist Ben Shapiro and Holocaust survivor Gidon Lev.
The CEO of X engaged in a public Twitter thread with controversial user Jackson Hinkle regarding the ban.
"Call him, beep him if you want reach President Biden," the White House wrote on X, attaching a phone number at the bottom.
Over 47,000 US users faced access issues with X and X Pro, according to Downdetector data. The site appeared to be back online in Israel by 9:00 AM local time.
The only principle that Hamas supporters hold to is that of victory at any cost. Israel must ensure that the terrorist organization must never again have a victory to celebrate.
Concerns arise as Elon Musk likes a post promoting anti-Jewish sentiment and criticizes the Anti-Defamation League, while previous interactions on social media suggest a troubling pattern.
Billionaire Elon Musk vowed to donate X's war-related revenue to hospitals in Israel, the Red Crescent in Gaza, and the Red Cross, following a recent antisemitism controversy.
In the lawsuit filed in a U.S. District Court in Texas, X claimed Media Matters "manipulated" the social media platform.
On Monday the State Department’s antisemitism envoy suggested that she opposed Greenblatt’s stance, while a member of one of the ADL’s advisory boards called the about-face “embarrassing.”