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Did Elon musk post on X about trump having a dick in his mouth
Executive summary
Available reporting shows Elon Musk and former President Donald Trump engaged in a very public, often profane online feud in mid‑2025, including X posts Musk later deleted and an accusation by Musk linking Trump to Jeffrey Epstein‑related files (reported deleted) — but none of the provided sources show Musk posting the specific vulgar claim you asked about (that Trump “had a dick in his mouth”) [1] [2]. Coverage documents deleted or explosive X posts and an apology/apparent thaw later in the year, but the exact quote you asked about is not found in the current reporting [1] [3] [4].
1. What the record actually documents: deleted, “explosive” posts and Epstein allegations
News outlets cited in the provided results report that Musk made inflammatory posts on X in the June 2025 spat with Trump, including a now‑deleted claim that Trump was “mentioned in ‘files’ of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,” and that at least some of Musk’s posts were removed or no longer visible [1] [2]. Those items are the primary documented examples of Musk’s most explosive social‑media content in this feud [1].
2. No source here reproduces the exact vulgar phrase you asked about
None of the supplied sources — including Reuters, The New York Times timeline coverage, CNBC, Business Insider, The Guardian, People, Daily Mail, Gizmodo and others in the list — quote Musk posting that specific formulation about Trump “having a dick in his mouth.” The materials note deleted posts, accusations about Epstein files, and other heated exchanges, but the precise graphic wording in your question is not present in the reporting you provided [1] [2] [5].
3. Context on deleted posts and platform ownership that matters
Reporting highlights that Musk owns X and that some of his posts about Trump were later deleted or otherwise not visible; CNBC explicitly describes one of the deleted posts accusing Trump of Epstein links, and The New York Times compiled a timeline of key posts during the feud [1] [2]. Ownership of the platform and the deletion of posts complicate third‑party verification: when posts are removed, contemporaneous documentation can be limited and media accounts rely on screenshots, quotes, or official denials [1].
4. Competing accounts and official reactions in the record
When Musk made explosive public accusations, the White House publicly disputed them; White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt rejected Musk’s Epstein‑related allegation, characterizing it as an “unfortunate episode” tied to policy disagreements, according to CNBC’s reporting [1]. This demonstrates competing narratives in contemporary coverage: Musk’s public posts versus official denials [1].
5. Aftermath: apology and a thaw in relations documented across outlets
Multiple outlets in the provided set — Business Insider, The New York Times, Reuters and People — describe a later reconciliation or at least a thaw: Musk attended a White House dinner with Trump and others in November 2025 and publicly thanked Trump on X, indicative of a rapprochement months after the summer feud [6] [7] [5] [4]. That subsequent warming shows how the dispute evolved beyond the June posts [6] [7].
6. Limits of these sources and what they don’t say
Available sources do not mention the exact obscene phrase you raised. If you saw that phrase elsewhere, it is not included in the subset of reporting you provided; I cannot confirm or deny material not present in these sources and must state that it is not found in current reporting (not found in current reporting). The reporting here concentrates on deleted posts, Epstein‑related allegations, and later reconciliation — not the specific vulgarity you asked about [1] [2] [3].
7. How to verify further (practical next steps)
To confirm whether Musk actually posted the precise phrase, look for contemporaneous screenshots archived by major outlets (The New York Times timeline, CNN, Reuters), X post IDs or Wayback/screenshot archives cited in reputable reporting, or direct archive captures referenced by those outlets; none of the sources you provided include such an item [2] [1]. If you want, I can search broader reporting for primary screenshots or archive captures beyond this set.