Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is among the wealthiest individuals on the planet.
He recently traveled to Mar-a-Lago to meet with Donald Trump.
But Mark Zuckerberg used two words to describe his “doomsday bunker” that put this reporter’s jaws on the floor.
Facebook was at the tip of the Big Tech spear that censored the New York Post’s bombshell story about the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop ahead of the 2020 election.
Under the direction of CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook also gave Democrats over $400 million for their ballot-harvesting operations.
But Mark Zuckerberg seems to be having a change of heart.
He previously sent a letter to House Judiciary Chairman Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) and admitted that the Biden regime leaned on him to censor content and that he regretted doing it for them.
“I believe the government pressure was wrong, and I regret that we were not more outspoken about it,” Zuckerberg wrote. “I also think we made some choices that, with the benefit of hindsight and new information, we wouldn’t make today.”
And Zuckerberg recently attended dinner with President-elect Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago and pledged $1 million for his inaugural celebration.
But Mark Zuckerberg is a mystery man to most Americans.
He recently sat down with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang for an interview about his life and plans for the future.
Chang brought up Zuckerberg’s 1,400-acre property on the island of Kauai in Hawaii.
She specifically asked him about the 4,500 square-foot bunker he is building underneath his home in Hawaii.
“Interviews with several people associated with the project, along with public records and court documents seen by WIRED, suggest that since then, the planning and construction of the roughly 1,400-acre compound has been shrouded in secrecy,” WIRED reported. “The property, known as Koolau Ranch, will, according to planning documents, include a 5,000-square-foot underground shelter, have its own energy and food supplies, and, when coupled with land purchase prices, will cost in excess of $270 million.”
But according to Zuckerberg, the bunker is just a “little shelter.”
“That’s just like a little shelter,” he told Chang. “Whatever you want to call it, hurricane shelter, whatever,” he continued. “I think it got like, blown out of proportion as if, like, the whole ranch was some kind of, like, doomsday bunker, which is just not true.”
“It’s just a basement!” he added. “It’s a basement.”
According to Zuckerberg, his bunker is not for surviving a doomsday scenario.
Instead, he claimed that he and his wife, Priscilla Chan, built their compound in Hawaii in order to “try to create the highest quality beef in the world.”
“The Kauai thing is really fun,” he said. “We have this whole vertical integration plan where we’re growing macadamia nuts to feed the macadamia meal, and we’re brewing beer because that helps them eat more. That’s fun.”
Of course, Zuckerberg is not the only tech titan with a doomsday “basement.”
According to Vacino, Bill Gates “has huge shelters under every one of his homes.”
Peter Thiel, who co-founded PayPal alongside Elon Musk, started to build a bunker in New Zealand, but local conservationists blocked his construction and killed his plans.
Mark Zuckerberg may claim his bunker is nothing but a “little shelter” for his ranch.
But with dozens of millionaires also rumored to have a bunker, many Americans are wondering what they know that they aren’t telling everyone.