Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Post on Musk doesn’t add up

- Jeff Cercone

When Tesla owner Elon Musk agreed to buy Twitter for $44 billion dollars, many social media users offered their thoughts on better ways the world’s richest man could have spent that money.

One Facebook post shared a screenshot of a tweet that read, “With 40 billion dollars, Elon Musk could have given each of the 330M people living in America a million dollars and still had $7B left over. Why aren’t more people talking about this?”

“Just posting this because I know you all needed to be angrier,” the Facebook post caption read. “You’re welcome.”

The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

The merits of Musk’s investment­s is a matter of opinion, but the math used in this post is way off.

Using the figures in the post and a

calculator, dividing $40 billion among 330 million Americans would mean each person would get $121.21.

The author seems to be handling the error in good humor.

In his Twitter biography, he calls himself a “math guy that had a viral

tweet about bad math.” And after being called out on his error, he pinned the tweet to the top of his feed and also shared a previous fact check PolitiFact did of a similar claim from MSNBC about former presidenti­al candidate Michael Bloomberg’s expenditur­es on campaign ads.

Our ruling

A Facebook post shared a tweet that claimed Musk could have given every American $1 million and still had $7 billion left over with the money he spent to buy Twitter.

That math, however, doesn’t add up. With $40 billion, 330 million Americans would get about $121.21 each. This claim is False.

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