Elon Musk, the world’s richest entrepreneur and a Renaissance Man who builds and flies spacecraft, brought electric cars closer to practicality than anyone before, and skewers the left with the immunity of someone who can’t be pigeonholed as a right-winger, just spent nearly $3 billion making himself Twitter’s largest shareholder and charming his way onto a seat on the social media company’s board. Musk has been both an ardent user and harsh critic of Twitter, and he means to lessen the platform’s shameless wokeness, which has extended to kicking off former President Donald Trump, despite his close-to-34 million followers, during the final weeks of his presidency and suppressing a New York Post story on Hunter Biden’s corruption that could have turned the 2020 election. The odds are that Musk will succeed, to some extent at least. But if he does, it will do much more than improve Twitter. He will …