
Mark Zuckerberg embraces the bro era, changes his look, and goes on Joe Rogan’s show to reaffirm his new alliance with Donald Trump and his team. Zuckerberg now claims that he and his company were “too biased” in their judgment back then, blaming Joe Biden and… Meta.
Joe Rogan

The CEO of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, took advantage of his recent appearance on Joe Rogan’s show to criticize the Biden administration, which he considers the cultural elite, including traditional media and journalists, as well as his own company, Meta.
His new allegiance

This tirade from Zuckerberg clearly aimed to display his new allegiance and loyalty to Donald Trump and his allies.
His unwavering support

Zuckerberg has recently multiplied initiatives to show his unwavering support for the Trump administration.
Key positions

Notably, he appointed close associates of Trump to key positions at Meta, made a one-million-dollar donation for Trump’s nomination, ended his fact-checking program on his platforms, as well as his DEI initiatives.
These topics

He also spoke on these topics during Joe Rogan’s podcast, in addition to showcasing a new look and a pseudo-confident attitude.
His own company

There, he addressed various topics, expressing a growing resentment toward several of them, including the policies of his own company.
Harshly criticized

Zuckerberg also harshly criticized the Biden administration for its handling of the COVID health crisis, accusing it of unjustly imposing a form of censorship on his company.
The tipping point

Although he admits to having agreed with most of these guidelines at the time, he claims that the tipping point for him occurred when Biden publicly accused social media of “killing people” by allowing misinformation to spread.
The Biden administration

According to him, the Biden administration regularly contacted his team to “scream, insult” and “threaten retribution” if certain posts, even those that Zuckerberg deemed truthful, were not removed from his social network.
2016

The CEO of Meta takes it back to the 2016 election to elaborate on his thoughts, claiming that he and others inside the company mistakenly adhered to the idea promoted by “traditional media” that misinformation on social media had favored the election of Donald Trump.
Too biased

Zuckerberg now claims that he and his company were “too biased” in their judgment back then. Obviously, we will never know the opinion of most of his subordinates, some of whom must be wondering what Republican bug suddenly bit their boss, who increasingly sounds like another billionaire eager for various theories and owner of a social network that recently changed its name. We’ll let you guess which one.