President Trump makes his entrance at the UFC Freedom 250 on the White House lawn, saluting the massive crowd alongside Dana White.
Zac Brown performed the national anthem as American jets conducted a flyover of Washington, D.C.
Electric vibes.
The first trillionaire in human history
- Elon Musk
- Born in South Africa
- Bullied relentlessly as a kid
- Immigrated to North America
- Arrived with a backpack and a dream
- Built Zip2 with his brother
- Sold it 4 years later for $300 million
- Co-founded PayPal with the profits
- Revolutionised digital payments
- Sold PayPal to eBay for $1.5 billion
- Bet everything on Tesla and SpaceX
- Got mocked for electric cars
- Got laughed at for reusable rockets
- Nearly went bankrupt in 2008
- Kept building anyway
- Turned Tesla into the world’s most valuable automaker
- Made EVs mainstream and transformed the automotive industry
- Made reusable rockets a reality
- Reduced the cost of reaching space by 95%
- Sparked the modern commercial space race
- Built Starlink and connected millions around the world to high-speed internet
- Turned SpaceX into the most valuable private company in history
- Bought Twitter for $44 billion
- The world said he overpaid
- He was called reckless, stupid & crazy
- Advertisers fled, media declared it dead
- Critics called it the worst acquisition in tech history
- Renamed it 𝕏
- Rebuilt the platform anyway
- Turned it into one of the most influential platforms on Earth
- Launched xAI and accelerated the global AI race
- Sent astronauts to space
- Is trying to get humans to mars
- Created millions of jobs
- Generated hundreds of billions in value
- Inspired an entire generation of builders
Before:
- Failed repeatedly
- Worked insane hours
- Slept in factories and offices
- Got bullied, laughed at and mocked
- Constantly told “it’s impossible”
- Kept building anyway
- Made it possible
Today:
- Richest person on Earth
- First trillionaire in human history
- Largest IPO in history $1.77 trillion
Most people quit when the world laughs at them.
Elon Musk built the future instead.
Love him or hate him…
Nobody has changed more industries in a single lifetime.
Payments. Cars. Energy. Space. Social Media. Communications. AI.
History won’t remember the people who said it couldn’t be done.
It will remember the people who did it anyway.
Congratulations Elon.
The first trillionaire. 🚀
@DaniJurinsky@CivicSparks@ArapahoeCounty Jefferson county has different colored ballots too. It is very concerning. Especially when the Postal Union supports a candidate. No fraud here. 🤣
🗽🇺🇸 THE PRO-J6 ARGUMENT THE ESTABLISHMENT NEVER WANTED DEBATED 🇺🇸🗽
I am a January 6er.
And before people instantly react emotionally, scream labels, or repeat media slogans, maybe Americans should ask themselves one simple question:
Why was there NEVER allowed to be a real national conversation about WHY tens of thousands of Americans felt that level of distrust toward their government in the first place?
Because the pro-J6 argument was never really about one building.
It was about a collapse of trust.
Millions of Americans believed:
▪️ the political system ignored them
▪️ the media manipulated narratives
▪️ Big Tech censored dissent
▪️ federal agencies operated politically
▪️ election concerns were dismissed instead of transparently addressed
▪️ Washington had become openly hostile toward ordinary citizens
For many people, January 6 became a symbol of a population that felt:
⚠️ unheard
⚠️ politically cornered
⚠️ culturally erased
⚠️ economically crushed
⚠️ mocked by elites
⚠️ and shut out of institutional power
Now here’s the part nobody wants to admit:
The reaction after January 6 validated many of those fears for millions of Americans.
Because what followed was:
▪️ mass censorship
▪️ financial deplatforming
▪️ aggressive federal investigations
▪️ military-style raids
▪️ speech crackdowns
▪️ social blacklisting
▪️ unprecedented prosecutions
▪️ expanded surveillance rhetoric
To supporters of the prosecutions, all of that was necessary accountability.
But to many J6ers and their supporters, it looked like:
💥 the full force of the federal government being unleashed against political dissenters.
That doesn’t mean every action on January 6 was right.
It doesn’t mean violence should be excused.
It doesn’t mean every person there was innocent.
But many Americans reject the idea that every single person present should automatically be treated as:
▪️ an insurrectionist
▪️ a terrorist
▪️ an enemy of the state
Especially when many attendees:
▪️ never assaulted anyone
▪️ never entered the Capitol
▪️ peacefully protested
▪️ believed they were exercising constitutional rights
▪️ or became swept into broad federal prosecutions afterward
The deeper pro-J6 argument is this:
January 6 exposed a political, cultural, and institutional fracture that already existed inside America.
And instead of healing it…
Washington often responded by escalating it.
Many J6ers now see themselves not as terrorists…
…but as political dissidents who became the warning shot of a much larger national crisis involving:
📂 censorship
📂 government power
📂 institutional trust
📂 selective enforcement
📂 media manipulation
📂 and constitutional rights
Agree or disagree with them…
That perspective now exists permanently in American history.
And pretending it doesn’t only deepens the divide.
👀 America is still arguing about what January 6 really meant.
✦✦ @BenKaxton • Tommy Tatum News ✦✦