Uh yeah. I have very mixed feelings about this whole work at home thing. Sure there are good sides to it, but a lot of bad ones too.
While this is clearly bringing a bit more comfort to workers and cutting costs, this is also not empowering them in the least. From what I've seen and what we can expect in the future, it's the opposite. It becomes extremely difficult for most people to make a clear distinction between work and private life, and it tends to contribute to destroying privacy, something that is already ongoing through other means. Your work is literally "invading" your home.
I am all for empowering people, but this is not it IMHO. It would require a complete change in the way we work, and *where* we do so is only a minor point in that equation. It doesn't matter, and only has the potential of making things worse.
As to Elon Musk, nobody knows what he is doing exactly. Just like nobody knows what all the other billionaires throwing huge amounts of cash here and there are doing exactly either. I (as well as some others) have been momentarily "happy"/laughing seeing all the woketards going bonkers over Musk buying Twitter. As if their lives depended on it. But it's only temporary and I have no illusion. Musk has mentioned turning twitter into something that would be close to what WeChat is in China, some sort of platform where "you do it all". I like the free speech idea, but I don't like the latter idea of concentrating too many services onto a single platform, potentally making it a gigantic surveillance system, and getting inspiration from totalitarian regimes.
So, we'll see. But what I'm almost pretty sure of is that it won't be anything we expected, be it the good for those thinking it'll be this great defense of freedom, or the bad for those thinking that it's way too dangerous to let people speak up, or whining about Twitter employees allegedly being bullied. All that is just the tip of the iceberg.