SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk is donating Starlinks to improve Wi-Fi for first responders battling wildfires in California with the help of nonprofit rescue group Grey Bull Rescue.
Video of additional fire coverage ... social media post on Saturday. Tesla CEO Elon Musk donated several Cybertrucks to be used as battery banks at the Altadena station of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. (Photo: Altadena Mountain Rescue ...
Elon Musk announced Sunday that he is sending Tesla Cybertrucks to Los Angeles after fires have torn through the region.
Even in the best of circumstances, a crisis like this would be a vector for bad information. The close Trump ally is only making it worse.
Newsom mocked Musk for having his “lies” about water shortage “exposed” during his own live-streamed briefing with a member of the LA fire command team.
While seeking to blame government officials for seven days of massive wildfires in Los Angeles, billionaire Elon Musk was ... by Gavin Newsom on X, Musk talks with a fire command team member ...
While reasons vary about the cause of the wildfires, a section of Conservatives have blamed DEI and a small fish for it.
The Los Angeles Times’ billionaire owner, Patrick Soon-Shiong, declared on X that “the Mayor cut LA Fire Department’s budget by $23M.” The right-wing social media account Libs of TikTok lambasted a political leadership team that “defunds the fire dept,” and Elon Musk boosted a post that lamented “LAFD underfunding.”
LOS ANGELES - Elon Musk is warning of a delay in Cybertruck deliveries in California as several will be donated to Los Angeles area communities that remain without power due to the Palisades and Eaton fires.
Wildfires have claimed at least ten lives, with the damage still unfolding as fire crews continue to battle the blazes
As wildfires devastate Los Angeles, burning over 28,000 acres and claiming at least 11 lives, some conservatives, including Trump and Musk, blame DEI initiatives in firefighting and environmental policies.
Conservative media personality took aim at the three women who hold leadership positions at the Los Angeles Fire Department