Going to say the original investors in Twitter are glad it is sold, they made a huge profit after all the risk, along with all those shareholders who were bought out. As to what will happen to it, it likely will still run for a long while, after all the biggest income is advertising, and there are plenty of advertisers who hedge bets, paying ad spend to the big online advertisers, so the pool is spread between Twitter, Meta and Alphabet, and not likely to change too much. Will bet that the US taxman is the biggest loser, this year is likely to result in a massive negative tax bill, and then bringing it into the rest will allow them to "lose" any profit for a good number of years as well. When you have a 900 page index for tax.......
As to South Africa having servants, that is really only for the top 0.5%, as to be in the 1% is not difficult, with official unemployment sitting at 30%, and unofficial at around 60%. I have never had a servant since I was around 10, do my own housework, do my own washing, do a lot of the maintenance as well. With minimum wage being around $400 AUS per month (weird that Aus has wages either weekly or monthly, but bills are monthly from what I see online), and nearly half the population getting welfare (that is not good, seeing as the tax base is around 10% now, with many of the top having already left, often to Aus and NZ, or Canada) that is below the minimum wage, and just about at poverty level.
Musk left SA in 1988, which is basically when it was another country, and in no way is representative of SA today, he is more Canadian American than anything else. You have more recent SA people in the USA, Charlise Theron (yes there are more than 44 people who speak Afrikaans, 35% of the mostly English city I live in), and, sorry for it, Die Antwoord. All different, all very different viewpoints.