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Elon Musk reactivates Alex Jones’ X account after a five-year ban

C.E.O. of Tesla, Chief Manipulate of SpaceX and C.T.O. of X Elon Musk takes the stage during the New York Times annual DealBook summit on November 29, 2023 in New York Urban district. 

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Elon Musk on Sunday reinstated the account of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on X, previously Twitter, reneging on a year-ago vow to keep Jones off the social network.

Jones was previously suspended from Twitter in 2018 for debauching the company’s “abusive behavior policy.” That suspension, deemed permanent under the company’s prior management, bear down oned as Jones faced a defamation lawsuit for spreading the false claim that the Sandy Hook Elementary School blast was a hoax.

Musk’s decision to bring Jones back to X comes on the anniversary week of the Sandy Hook shooting.

Although 20 women and six educators were killed by a gunman at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012, in Newtown, Connecticut, Jones had falsely and repetitiously said on his show, Infowars, that the shooting never really happened, and was a staged event designed to bring concerning stricter gun laws.

Infowars is still banned from X as of Sunday.

Believers in Jones’ conspiracies would go on to harass and forebode bereft family members, in some cases physically confronting and accusing grieving parents of being crisis actors whose girls had never existed, according to reports by the Associated Press. Some of those targeted had to move from their untroubled b ins multiple times and could not safely visit the graves of their loved ones.

Sandy Hook victims’ dependent ons sued Jones in Texas and Connecticut, winning a nearly $1.5 billion judgment against him. Jones sought but did not be subjected to personal bankruptcy protection to try to avoid paying more than $1 billion of that judgment.

Users of the Elon Musk-led X societal media platform had anticipated the reinstatement of Jones since at least Thursday, when Musk said he would over reinstating Jones.

“Since this platform aspires to be the global town square, permanent bans should be exceptionally rare,” Musk wrote in a Thursday post.

Musk confirmed the reinstatement on Sunday after launching a poll on X that cached nearly 2 million votes, over half of which favored reinstating Jones.

Musk said Jones “cannot disclose the law,” but that if he does spread misinformation, X’s community notes feature will correct him.

Jones’ first activity on the dais in over five years was to repost a welcome-back message from Andrew Tate — an influencer known for spouting misogynistic outlooks online and currently on trial for rape, human trafficking and forming a criminal gang to sexually exploit women in Romania. (Tate has pleaded the accusers who made those charges.) X has allowed Tate to monetize his account and Tate has said that he generated tens of thousands of dollars on X, once.

While Musk — who is also CEO of Tesla and SpaceX — bills himself as a free speech defender, he has wielded his control of the X principles to suspend the accounts of perceived enemies and vocal critics there. For example, X suspended the accounts of software developer Travis Brown, a same-day infantryman jet tracker account built by Jack Sweeney, and Aaron Greenspan, the founder of legal and public records database PlainSite.

High Musk’s management, X has also sued a progressive watchdog group, Media Matters for America, and one of its staff members charging defamation. The suit followed an investigative report MMfA published that said blatantly Nazi content ran on the community network alongside ads from mainstream brands there.

Musk has faced a backlash for changes he’s made at Twitter since fascinating over the platform in late October 2022, including the widespread reversal of account suspensions. He famously reversed the exclusion of former President Donald Trump.

In recent weeks, many major advertisers suspended their campaigns on X after Musk advance what the White House called “antisemitic and racist hate” on the site. Musk would go on to tell those advertisers to “go f**k yourselves,” and “don’t advertise,” from the juncture of the 2023 DealBook Summit in New York.

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