'God' Throws Shade At 'World's Craziest, Pettiest' Man After Elon Musk Blocks Him On Twitter
Elon Musk has again managed to grab the eyeballs after he blocked an account on Twitter named ‘God’.
Twitter CEO Elon Musk, who is known for his peculiar and unconventional tweets on various matters, has again managed to grab the eyeballs after he blocked an account on Twitter named ‘God’.
A Twitter page named ‘God (Not a Parody, Actually God)’ shared a post on the micro-blogging site with a screenshot of Musk’s profile in which it can be seen that Space X founder has blocked the page. Various posts made on this page in the past goes to suggest that the page took digs multiple times after which Musk blocked the page.
I’m not back.
— God (Not a Parody, Actually God) (@TheTweetOfGod) March 21, 2023
Just couldn’t help but showing you this.
The world’s richest, craziest, and pettiest man, everybody. pic.twitter.com/Nw8M8HO9RJ
The post has garnered close to 5 million views and is not taken down yet. Many users reacted to the post and ended up finding the funny side of it. “Well done God!,” a twitter user named KID VICIOUS wrote.
Well done God!
— KID VICIOUS🔪 (@kirkacevedo) March 21, 2023
“Damn,” wrote another user.
Damn 😭
— Ehsan N. #MahsaAmini (@Ehsanism) March 21, 2023
Asking the reason for which Musk blocked the page, a user wrote “Lol what did you do?”. A user named Tokah wrote, “thats actually good. he’s playing god and doesnt want any competitors”.
thats actually good. he’s playing god and doesnt want any competitors
— Tokah 🏯 (@tokah0x) March 21, 2023
Elon Musk on Tuesday hinted that the micro-blogging platform will soon increase the long-form tweets to 10,000 characters, along with simple formatting tools. However, the Twitter chief did not provide a timeline as to when this new feature will arrive. Earlier this month, the company said it will extend "long-form tweets" to 10,000 characters.
It also said Blue subscribers in the US can post long tweets of up to 4,000 characters on the platform. Only Blue subscribers can post longer tweets, but non-subscribers can read, reply, retweet, and quote tweet to them. Earlier, tweets were restricted to only 280 characters, which still applies to non-subscribers.