Twitter owner Elon Musk this week reinstated a right-wing conspiracy theorist who shared child sexual abuse material on the platform (now known as X), ignoring the company’s “zero tolerance” policy and his own pledge to rid Twitter of such content in order to appease right-wing influencers. Musk’s actions are especially damaging to user and advertiser safety, as it shows that Twitter’s owner is willing to personally bend the platform’s written rules of content moderation for his own gain.
QAnon-adjacent conspiracy theorist Dominick McGee, who is well-known among right-wing conspiracy influencers as Dom Lucre, was suspended days after posting a screenshot on July 22 from a child sexual abuse video made by convicted sex offender Peter Scully.
Lucre continued on his normal conspiracy beat after sharing the image, posting several tweets and hosting a Twitter Spaces chat to push the conspiracy theory that former President Barack Obama was somehow responsible for the recent drowning death of his personal chef.
Lucre’s account was finally suspended late on July 25, triggering backlash the next morning from his followers and fellow conspiracy theorists, often tagging Musk.
Right-wing influencers Catturd (real name Phillip Buchanan) and Chaya Raichik, who is behind the anti-LGBTQ account Libs of TikTok, both called to “free” Lucre. Former Trump administration official Monica Crowley also asked Musk to “please reinstateDom Lucre,” calling the suspension “BS.”
Some on the right alleged that Lucre’s suspension was directly related to his Obama conspiracy theory content:
Several conservative influencers assumed that Lucre’s suspension was only a continuation of Twitter and social media companies at large censoring conservatives:
Mid-day on July 26, Twitter influencer Ed Krassenstein argued that Twitter should publicly show why a user was suspended, as well as implement a voting system for suspensions. Musk responded that Lucre’s account was suspended for violating Twitter’s policy against sharing child sexual exploitation materials and claimed that only members of Twitter’s CSE team saw the images, despite Twitter’s measures showing that the tweet had over 3 million views before it was deleted. Musk also said that Twitter would delete those tweets and restore Lucre’s account.
Lucre immediately resumed posting conspiracy theory content about the Obamas, thanked the various users who called for his reinstatement, and soon moved on to defending himself and attacking Musk for claiming he posted child sexual abuse content:
Lucre later said, “I won’t be silent just because I’m back. This is a false win if he allows people to think I’m spreading porn.” He also hosted a Twitter Spaces conversation complaining about Musk’s tweets and defending himself from the allegations.
Musk caving to this pressure from right-wing influencers illustrates how unsafe Twitter has become for users and advertisers alike. Musk has proven he will shirk the responsibilities of content moderation, even those he has personally pledged to protect and enforce, in order to please his preferred base. Even then, when he does as they say and breaks his own rules, they can still continue to reject him and ask for more, as Lucre has now done.
As for Musk's site: As he follows its most extreme posters down the rabbit hole, things can still get worse. As Ryan Broderick noted: