Elon Musk ignited a firestorm on social media after condemning The New York Times for publishing a 2014 opinion piece that framed pedophilia as a mental disorder rather than exclusively as criminal behavior, calling the outlet “utterly disgusting” and reigniting national debates about child protection and media responsibility.
The Controversial Opinion Piece
The article at the center of the controversy originally appeared in October 2014, written by Rutgers University law professor Margo Kaplan under the headline “Pedophilia: A Disorder, Not a Crime.” Kaplan argued that attraction to children should be recognized as a psychiatric condition listed in the DSM-5 mental health manual. She emphasized that while child abuse remains illegal and punishable, treating the attraction itself as a treatable disorder could help individuals seek therapy before acting on harmful impulses. The opinion piece drew limited attention when first published, but resurfaced in early 2025.
The New York Times is utterly disgusting https://t.co/0xAE4raE6z
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 24, 2026
Political and Public Response
Senator Mike Lee of Utah brought renewed attention to the column by sharing a screenshot on X, labeling the concept “delusional” and insisting pedophilia is a crime, not a disorder. Musk quickly amplified the criticism, responding to Lee’s post and adding his own condemnation. In a separate comment, he called The Times “evil propaganda,” consistent with his pattern of challenging mainstream media outlets. His posts generated millions of views within hours, with supporters echoing concerns about what they view as dangerous framing that could erode public trust in protecting children.
The Broader Context
Musk has positioned himself as an advocate for child safety online, implementing stricter content moderation policies on X to combat exploitative material. The controversy arrives amid heightened national attention to child protection issues and references to high-profile cases involving figures like Jeffrey Epstein. Kaplan’s original argument cited Germany’s confidential therapy program for non-offenders as evidence that treatment could prevent crimes. Critics counter that framing pedophilia primarily as a disorder risks normalizing morally unacceptable attractions. The debate highlights tensions between public health approaches focused on prevention and criminal justice perspectives emphasizing punishment and protection. Musk’s history includes a 2018 defamation lawsuit over similar accusations, though a jury cleared him in 2019.

Who says a disorder can’t be a crime as well? Serial killers have a disorder and murder is a crime.