This is the Guardian.
Today.
How Elon Musk was radicalized and what the rest of us can do about it.
One of the biggest stories in the UK at the moment is the topic of grooming gangs.
And it's a horrendous story.
Young girls and women in towns across England who from the late 90s to the early 2000s, were preyed on and sexually assaulted by organized gangs.
In Hull, our investigation into several victims of a predominantly Asian grooming gang led to Humberside police reopening that room.
That flat took my childhood from me.
It's been the subject of major government inquiries that have made hundreds of recommendations on changing the law to make sure these terr horrible crimes stop happening, never happen again.
People there feel they've been badly let down.
I know that and Alexis J's report looked at this issue amongst others.
But the discussion over the past week hasn't been about solutions.
It hasn't been about making the lives of survivors better.
It's been about whatever Elon Musk wants it to be.
Elon Musk has accused the British Prime Minister of being, and I quote, deeply complicit.
The mass rapes in exchange for votes.
Now, Jess Phillips has told ITV News she is worried for her own safety after Elon Musk attacked her on his social media site X.
For years, the world's richest man has been getting more eccentric, more reckless and more influential.
But we've never seen him like this, taking disproven far right talking points on issues from grooming gangs to immigration to censorship and through obsessive posting on his platform X, forcing them into the mainstream of democracies around the world.
What happened to Elon Musk?