<img src="https://sb.scorecardresearch.com/p?c1=2&amp;c2=36750692&amp;cv=3.6.0&amp;cj=1"> 'No, it's fake FFS': Elon Musk's own Grok AI bot seems to confirm the Stephen Miller-wife rumors are true – We Got This Covered
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‘No, it’s fake FFS’: Elon Musk’s own Grok AI bot seems to confirm the Stephen Miller-wife rumors are true

Even Grok can't get its story straight.

In a plot twist, Stephen Miller’s wife.

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Musk insists the post is fake, but Grok—an AI tool he owns—suggests otherwise. So what’s going on, and did Elon say he “took” Stephen Miller’s wife? Let’s unravel this digital soap opera.

The alleged post and the rumor

On June 8, 2025, screenshots began circulating on X, showing a purported reply from Elon Musk to Stephen Miller: Just like I took your wife. The timestamp? 12:02 PM PDT. The context? Musk hired Stephen Miller’s wife, Katie Miller, in late May 2025. Katie, formerly Mike Pence’s communications director, has mostly stayed out of the headlines until now.

The claim insinuates that Musk didn’t just hire Katie Miller, but did so with personal, possibly romantic motivations. Was it trolling? Was it real? Or was it AI-generated disinformation?

Enter Grok: The AI caught in a loyalty crisis

Grok is Musk’s homegrown AI chatbot, integrated into X and designed to answer questions with real-time platform insights and a cheeky personality. Think of it as ChatGPT’s edgier, slightly unhinged cousin—except this cousin works directly for Musk.

When @shipo99 asked Grok whether the Musk post was deleted or never existed, Grok gave a surprisingly candid—and damning—answer: The post from Elon Musk likely existed and was deleted… The screenshot’s engagement metrics and context align with Musk’s behavior…

So Musk’s own AI basically said: “Yeah, he probably posted it and then yeeted it into the digital void.”

The explanation even itted that while it could be fake, all signs point to it being real and subsequently removed—consistent with Musk’s pattern of deleting controversial posts. Ouch.

Musk Responds: “No, it’s fake FFS”

Hours later, Musk jumped in to deny the drama, tweeting: No, it’s fake ffs 🤦‍♂️ I never posted this.

The post has since racked up over 140K views, but the damage may already be done. If Grok is trained on internal X data and timelines, and it’s saying the post likely existed, we’ve got a credibility standoff between Musk and… Musk’s bot.

The real question: Who’s controlling the narrative?

This mini-scandal isn’t just about a salacious claim involving Miller’s wife. It’s about digital trust and how platforms like X handle the increasingly blurry line between real and fake. When screenshots can be faked, bots can be trained on behavior, and owners contradict their machines, who do we believe?

Grok, ironically, was marketed as a truth-telling alternative to mainstream AI—one that would be “funny,” “irreverent,” and less “woke.” But here it is, potentially outing its boss. The real kicker? If Musk truly didn’t post the “took your wife” tweet, why did Grok think he did?

Whether it was a post gone rogue, a fabrication, or an elaborate troll, one thing is clear: Grok’s version of events adds fuel to the fire Musk desperately wants to extinguish.

In a post-truth internet age, we now face a new frontier: when billionaires argue with their own AI bots in public, and everyone else grabs the popcorn.


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Author
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William Kennedy
William Kennedy is a full-time freelance content writer and journalist in Eugene, OR. William covered true crime, among other topics for Grunge.com. He also writes about live music for the Eugene Weekly, where his beat also includes arts and culture, food, and current events. He lives with his wife, daughter, and two cats who all politely accommodate his obsession with Doctor Who and The New Yorker.