Bias Watch

Elon Musk Takes Aim at Wikipedia with Grokipedia

Elon Musk Takes Aim at Wikipedia with Grokipedia

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Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk is continuing his battle with liberals and leftists by launching his own version of Wikipedia. The site which went live this week is named Grokipedia which will serve as a more truthful version of Wikipedia. Grokipedia has 885,279 articles, which pales in comparison to Wikipedia’s 7 million plus.

Musk calls Wikipedia, wokeipedia for its consistent left-wing bias and has decided to put some of his vast financial resources to combating that bias. Grokipedia will be powered by Musk’s xAI.

Conservatives are hoping that it becomes the right-wing version of Wikipedia, but there is no guarantee that will happen with Musk’s mercurial personality.

This latest venture by Musk will surely rile liberal owners of Teslas and other products that he produces, but at this stage of his life and his fortune secured, he is going all-in on fighting those that he disagrees with and considers bad for not only his business but America as well.

Musk, who headed the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) for the first few months of the Trump administration, has returned to Tesla to reassure shareholders that he is focused on the car company and the slumping EV market, but Grokipedia shows that he is still going to express his opinions on matters that roil liberals even if it costs him money.

Don Irvine
Donald Irvine is the chairman of of Accuracy in Academia (AIA), a non-profit research group reporting on bias in education. Irvine follows his father’s legacy, Reed Irvine, to critically analyze the liberal media’s bias and brings over thirty years of media analysis experience. He has published countless blog posts and articles on media bias, in context of current events, and he has been interviewed by many news media outlets during his professional career. He currently hosts a livestream weekly show on AIA’s Facebook page which discusses current events. Irvine graduated from the University of Maryland and rose up the ranks to become chairman of Accuracy in Media until his transition to AIA. He resides in the suburbs around the nation’s capital and is a proud father and grandfather.

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