Elon Musk reshares bizarre tweet claiming women are designed 'to be traded to another tribe'

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk reshared a social media post that described women as “built to be traded to another tribe (or captured),” suggesting they are only safe through such arrangements due to physical weakness.
The post further claims women eventually enforce a dominating culture in conformity with White patriarchal norms.
Insightful. Women are built to be traded to another tribe (or captured) and slide seamlessly into their new culture. That keeps them safe,even though they are physically weak.
— Dr. Insensitive Jerk (@DrInsensitive) July 29, 2025
20 years after they are captured, they are the matriarchs who enforce that culture.
That is why women… https://t.co/3HHvxOd4rq
Elon Musk reposts a controversial tweet claiming women are meant to be traded between tribes as it keeps them safe
In response to a post on X (formerly Twitter), user @morgonnm posed the question, “Why do liberal white women hate white people so much?” Elon Musk replied, “They’ve been programmed to do so by their teachers and the media.”
They’ve been programmed to do so by their teachers and the media
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 29, 2025
Shortly after, a user going by “Dr. Insensitive Jerk” quoted Musk’s post and launched into a lengthy explanation about what they claimed women were “built” for in the first place, which was later reposted by the Tesla CEO.
“Insightful. Women are built to be traded to another tribe (or captured) and slide seamlessly into their new culture. That keeps them safe, even though they are physically weak,” the post read. “20 years after they are captured, they are the matriarchs who enforce that culture. That is why women conform to the dominant culture, and thereby amplify that culture.”
The user argued that Western women purportedly align with “anti-white culture” because it ensures short-term safety, although ultimately they will be forced back into white-defined roles.
The post continued, “IMO, that is why Western women, raised in anti-white culture, are now amplifying anti-white culture, even though they are white. They think that keeps them safe, and they are correct, but only in the short term. In the long term, they will be forced to remember they are white. Better they are reminded of that by white men, because the alternative is not so gentle.”

Internet calls bizarre claim about women 'rubbish' after Elon Musk amplifies it
Elon Musk sparked a firestorm online after appearing to amplify a controversial claim suggesting that “women are built to be traded,” by engaging with a post containing the inflammatory remark.

The interaction quickly went viral, fueling heated debate about misogyny, power, and the responsibility of influential figures on social media platforms.
One wrote, "As you describe this phenomenon, it seems to work like a Stockholm syndrom," and another quipped, "Two males analyzing women 🤣🤣🤣."
A person bluntly wrote, "Rubbish," while someone else said, "Only a man could come up with such a theory. This black-and-white debate has always worked. Either to dominate or to suppress, or simply to create chaos."
An individual offered, "This just describes most people. Maybe a higher percentage of women, sure, but so many men are essentially this way as well. We need to encourage people to actually think critically and reason for themselves rather than by the analogy of whatever inputs they are most exposed to."
As you describe this phenomenon, it seems to work like a Stockholm syndrom.
— Coumarou💸 (@BleuBourgeon) July 30, 2025
Only a man could come up with such a theory. This black-and-white debate has always worked. Either to dominate or to suppress, or simply to create chaos.
— Kopke Monica (@mimoja12) July 30, 2025
This just describes most people. Maybe a higher percentage of women, sure, but so many men are essentially this way as well. We need to encourage people to actually think critically and reason for themselves rather than by the analogy of whatever inputs they are most exposed to.
— Charles Dawson (@1epsilon1) July 30, 2025
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