“I wish Elon Musk was forced to tweet a thousand times: I will never use the drawings of again Milo Manara without permission. He will never use Milo Manara’s drawings again without permission. I will never use again… How about I sue him, asking him $44Bn in compensation? So I could buy Twitter back and hand it over to someone else!”

Thus the great draftsman Milo Manara, original author of the table used – evidently without permission – by Elon Musk in one of his tweets, as often happens lately, a little over the top. In a post on Facebook, the author of many comic book masterpieces replies to Musk with a provocation, also translated into English.

In a few hours, Manara’s drawing relaunched by Musk has become one of the most reworked and shared memes on social media, obviously starting from Twitter. In the work we see a very sensual female figure and a friar next to it that it is not known whether she is disturbed or not, so that the viewer can remain trapped in the charm of the mystery. Musk had titled it “And lead us not into temptation”, a direct invitation to Donald Trump to publish the first ‘tweet’ after the bird’s rehabilitation on the social network: according to some interpretations, Musk wanted to suggest that the former president is struggling to keep away from Twitter. And The Donald so far seems intent on staying on his Truth Social, where he has 4.61 million followers; however, he renounces the 87.5 million who now follow his Twitter account, which has remained inactive so far.