'Maybe it has covid': Elon Musk jokes that he allegedly caused California's health department website to crash after he linked to it during a Twitter rant (TSLA)

- Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has been active on Twitter this week rallying against coronavirus-related stay-at-home orders in the US.
- On Wednesday night, Musk tweeted out a graph using data from the California Health and Human Services Agency, claiming the state's low hospitalization rates are a reason to ease lockdown measures.
- An hour after tweeting a link to CHHS' data portal, Musk said the website had crashed. "Maybe it has covid," he wrote on Twitter.
- Some who are against the lockdown have used the emptiness of hospital beds as evidence that the impact of the coronavirus has been exaggerated. However, many hospitals have canceled elective surgeries to free up space for COVID-19 patients, and others have cited a decrease in trauma patients due to stay-at-home orders.
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On Wednesday night, Musk tweeted a link to the data portal for the California Health and Human Services Agency, which provides up-to-date information on the number of coronavirus-related deaths, cases, and hospital patients who have tested positive across the state. An hour later, Musk wrote that the CHHS site had crashed.
"Maybe it has covid," Musk tweeted.
Business Insider has been unable to verify that the server for the CHHS website experienced outages Wednesday night, although the data portal was working without issues by Thursday morning. The California Department of Public Health — the division overseeing CHHS — said it is looking into the claims. Cloudflare, the cybersecurity company whose network CHHS operates on, did not respond to Business Insider's request for comment.
California HHS server crashed. Maybe it has covid. pic.twitter.com/eGkdPmBpAK— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 30, 2020
Musk tweeted a graph that was built using data from CHHS to show that there are currently around 6,500 patients who have tested positive for COVID-19 occupying California hospital beds. There are nearly 75,000 hospital beds across the state. Musk accompanied his graph with the claim, "hospitals in California have been half empty this whole time."
More than 45,000 people in California have tested positive for COVID-19, the coronavirus disease, and state Gov. Gavin Newsom has suggested that more than half of the state's 40 million residents could be infected. Newsom has warned that the state's hospitals could need around 60,000 hospital beds for coronavirus patients by mid-May if no intervention measures are taken.
Hospitals in California have been half empty this whole time pic.twitter.com/8GL2BLypqV— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 30, 2020
However, there are a number of factors that could be contributing to the low number of hospital beds that are occupied in California. The state has been under a lockdown order since March 19, and has been directed to adhere to social distancing guidelines "until further notice." A recent study found that since the lockdown orders went into place in California, the number of traffic collisions and resulting patients has decreased dramatically. Additionally, hospital beds in the state have been freed up after many hospitals in California postponed and canceled elective surgeries.
Musk has consistently downplayed the severity of the novel coronavirus since mid-March. Early on, he tweeted that "the panic will cause more harm than the virus, if that hasn't happened already." Tesla had previously encouraged employees to return to work April 29, despite instructions from California that staff had to stay home until at least May 4. CNBC reported Tuesday that Tesla has since canceled plans to make employees return to work by the end of April.
Early on Thursday, Musk tweeted "LIBERTY" in all caps, along with several American flag emoji and an Apple Animoji of a unicorn using explicit language. He quickly deleted the tweet.

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