On September 13–14, a rumor spread online claiming that Elon Musk fired 2,000 X employees after a joke about Charlie Kirk’s assassination surfaced. Posts on social media included screenshots, memes, and dramatic captions suggesting Musk made the move overnight.
Websites like BreakingNewsAZ.today published the claim, but none provided any proof or official confirmation.
Searches and Hashtags Go Viral
The story fueled heavy online interest. Searches for “Did Elon Musk fire 2000 employees” spiked across the U.S., especially in Texas, Florida, and California. On X, the hashtag #MuskMassFiring trended for a short time as users debated the rumor.
Still, no credible media outlet reported on such layoffs.
No Evidence Supports the Claim
Checks of Musk’s X account and the official company blog show no mention of mass firings. Since September 10, Musk’s posts have focused on xAI updates and the DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) layoffs, not employee dismissals.
The claim also doesn’t make sense mathematically: the current X workforce is under 1,500 employees, so firing 2,000 staff would be impossible.
Reliable Sources Deny the Story
The outlets pushing the story cited “leaked Slack messages” and anonymous insiders, but these cannot be verified. Trusted news organizations like Reuters, BBC, and The New York Times have reported no mass firings at X.
Musk did publicly acknowledge Charlie Kirk’s death, calling it a time for reflection, but he never linked it to staff changes.
Why the Hoax Spread
Experts say the rumor spread quickly because it combined:
- A well-known figure (Elon Musk)
- A tragic event (Charlie Kirk’s assassination)
- Musk’s past layoffs
- Social media hype
This mix of fact and fiction made the false claim seem believable, fueling engagement and rapid sharing online.