It's cultish when people say it's good just because they want to think it's good.
It's cultish when people say it's bad just because they want to think it's bad.
When the person you're responding to makes a strong assertion about a person's intentions[1] and you respond suggesting that anybody who might not think this way is part of a cult, it comes off very much that you want the assertion to be true.
Unless your belief is truly, "Anybody who might possibly agree with {{some specific person}} is part of a cult," then this comment does not do your thoughts justice. There's more to be said and you did not bother to say it.
[1] > Musk doesn't really care about Twitter's role as a tool for good, he cares about his ego.
Just to help your reading comprehension, he's suggesting that anyone who says stuff like "Value for money, it's probably the most effective $43B anyone has spent in the US" might have drank too much of the Kool-Aid.
It's cultish when people say it's bad just because they want to think it's bad.
When the person you're responding to makes a strong assertion about a person's intentions[1] and you respond suggesting that anybody who might not think this way is part of a cult, it comes off very much that you want the assertion to be true.
Unless your belief is truly, "Anybody who might possibly agree with {{some specific person}} is part of a cult," then this comment does not do your thoughts justice. There's more to be said and you did not bother to say it.
[1] > Musk doesn't really care about Twitter's role as a tool for good, he cares about his ego.