๐ฅ 48 HOURS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD ๐ฅ
Dec 5: ๐ช๐บ The EU hits X with a โฌ120M fine โ the first ever under the Digital Services Act.
Dec 7: The owner of X fires back: โAbolish the EU. I mean it.โ
๐ฅ Millions of views. Hundreds of thousands of likes. The internet explodes.
This isnโt a simple tech dispute anymore.
Itโs the worldโs most influential platform owner โ and a U.S. presidential advisor โ calling for the end of a 27-nation union governing 450M people and โฌ17T in GDP.
Three moves. Two days:
โ ๏ธ Fine issued โ โ Ad account terminated โ ๐ฅ Abolition demanded.
Europe hasnโt seen a private challenge this direct since 1945.
Why this moment is different:
๐ He owns the platform.
๐๏ธ He advises the president.
๐ฐ๏ธ He controls the satellites.
๐ He builds the rockets.
๐ He moves markets with a single sentence.
The EU has no app store to threaten, no ad revenue to pull, no infrastructure leverage. Regulation was their last weapon โ and he told 600M users that the institution should vanish.
Now Brussels faces three losing options:
โ๏ธ Escalate โ proves his point.
โฉ๏ธ Retreat โ shows weakness.
๐ Ignore โ looks irrelevant.
There is no clean exit.
The question is no longer โAre platforms too powerful?โ
Itโs now: โIs anyone powerful enough to govern them?โ
Weโre watching 20th-century institutions collide with 21st-century infrastructure โ in real time.
And what comes next has no precedent. ๐จ
