Trump You Are Fake News Gif Have You Tried Turning It Off and on Again Gif

"Did you come across what the president tweeted?"

Information technology doesn't matter on which side of the aisle you sit or if you plop down right in the heart. At some bespeak since the inauguration, furious or elated, you probably uttered those words.

President Trump has parted with many conventions of the highest office over the by four years, but perhaps none has been more visible than his keeping of a personal Twitter business relationship.

He has used information technology to announce policy, movement markets, assault the press, dispute reports, insult enemies and energize his base — all unvarnished by a journalist's estimation.

"Without Twitter, at that place would be no Donald Trump presidency," said CNN senior political analyst Kirsten Powers. "And I think he knows that."

Politicians have ever taken to the latest applied science to craft their images, whether President Franklin Roosevelt'due south "fireside chats" on the radio or President John Kennedy'south news conferences on television. Twitter has offered Trump immediacy and rendered pesky handlers somewhat obsolete, equally reaching his 87 meg followers takes one click of a button.

"The greatest weakness politicians accept is they're inauthentic. Backside closed doors, they exercise offensive things. But when they're in public, they deed with perfect decorum," said Ari Fleischer, a Fox News contributor who served as President George W. Bush's printing secretarial assistant. "I recall i of the reasons Trump remains politically competitive is considering a lot of Americans credit him with existence authentic, fifty-fifty if he goes likewise far."

Jamie Weinstein, a conservative political journalist and host of the podcast "The Jamie Weinstein Show," predicted that the account has so resonated with Trump's base of operations and and so infuriated his critics that "when the president leaves office, his Twitter business relationship all the same volition probably be the nigh powerful Twitter account in the world."

Just not all tweets are created equal. As Election Mean solar day approaches, we selected the defining tweets of Trump's presidency, the ones that made the near impact and highlighted major themes from the by four years.

THE MARKET MOVER

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He wasn't even the president yet. Seventeen days before the inauguration, equally the dominicus was rising, Trump tweeted this threat to the automotive company.

Google searches for GM shot up 200 per centum, while the company's stock value declined by 24 cents, a .07 pct drop thanks to 26 words. The corporation responded within an hr and a half with a statement: "All Chevrolet Cruze sedans sold in the U.S. are built in GM'southward associates found in Lordstown, Ohio," calculation that the Cruze was assembled in Mexico for "global markets."

"Donald Trump'southward Twitter business relationship is the greatest bully pulpit that has ever existed," Corey Lewandowski, Trump'due south former campaign manager, told The Washington Post at the time. "In 140 characters, he tin modify the direction of a Fortune 100 company, he tin can notify earth leaders and he tin can also notify government agencies that business as usual is over."

Turns out that wasn't just spin. And Trump's tweets have affected global markets and so ofttimes that analysts at JPMorgan created an index measuring the probability that his tweets moved the bond market place, dubbing it the "Volfefe Index."

THE MYSTERIOUS TYPO

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Just after midnight, Trump sent that strange sentence fragment into the world, where it remained until its deletion some five and a one-half hours later. As it was relentlessly retweeted and liked, the press — this reporter included — jumped to cover the typo, as if it were a thing of national security.

"Who can figure out the truthful meaning of 'covfefe' ??? Bask!" Trump cheekily tweeted the next morning.

"I think the president and a minor group of people know exactly what he meant," so-printing secretary Sean Spicer said at a news conference. (Narrator vox: They didn't.)

Personalized license plates bearing the typo were claimed across the land (but not in Georgia, where it was banned). Dozens upon dozens of applications for the word poured into the U.Southward. Patent and Trademark Office. Linguists sought its pronunciation. A nib in the Firm was named after it, equally was a racehorse. The bill failed; the horse won.

For Trump's critics, "covfefe" represented incompetence. For his supporters, information technology displayed both relatability — Who doesn't make typos? — and proof that the media will make a mountain out of any mole hill of a mistake. Some conspiratorial-minded ones acted as if they knew exactly what information technology meant. A meme was built-in.

"It'due south non your typical auto-right. … Information technology'due south this odd, weird, hysterical group of letters," said Eric Schnure, an ex-speechwriter for former vice president Al Gore who has written jokes for politicians on both sides of the alley. "The follow-upwardly is what made it live. Nosotros can just guess, merely if he had said, 'That'due south funny. I typed that while falling comatose,' would the story be the same?"

Fleischer, though, argued that the typo may accept been a net positive for the president. "I get a kick out of reporters who chide him for spelling errors in his tweets. I mean, I'm sorry, but those reporters come across as the scolding schoolteacher we never liked. And Trump is again seen as real," he said. "Plus, it was only a funny word."

THE TROLLING GIF

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Trump certainly doesn't keep his feelings about the mainstream media individual (or vice versa). He's tweeted the term "false news" more than 800 times since his inauguration.

Never was his loathing more axiomatic than when he tweeted a GIF showing him performing in a WWE professional person wrestling match, tackling and punching his opponent, who had a CNN logo superimposed on his head.

Political historian Julian Zelizer said that it "embodies everything" well-nigh Trump's Twitter presence. "It'southward outrageous. It has a violent message, which you lot can say, if you're a defender, that it's merely meant to be a joke. And information technology's going subsequently an institution that he sees as oppositional." (The White House and the Trump campaign did not return requests for comment for this article.)

"Every president has fought with the national media at some betoken," Ronald Reagan biographer Craig Shirley said, recalling a alphabetic character that Harry Truman sent to a Washington Mail service critic threatening to punch him in the nose, or Franklin Roosevelt "handing an imaginary dunce cap" to a reporter and telling him to sit in the corner. Those, however, weren't public declarations.

The CNN GIF was reportedly showtime posted to Reddit's now-banned far-right message board r/The_Donald by a user who later apologized for it. How Trump constitute it remains a mystery (the White House claims he didn't get information technology from the online bulletin board). Courtney Radsch, advancement director for the Committee to Protect Journalists, told the Guardian at the time, "Singling out individual journalists and news outlets creates a chilling effect and fosters an environment where farther harassment and fifty-fifty physical attacks are seen to be acceptable."

"I was outraged by it, and I establish it kind of scary," said Powers, the CNN political annotator. "I used to exist on Pull a fast one on where I said things that made the audience mad all the time. Information technology wasn't until Trump that I started having legitimate fears."

Others, though, pointed out that the GIF might accept been a form of Net trolling, a childish effort to provoke a disproportionate reaction from the media.

It wasn't "exactly a presidential tweet, but likewise not quite the threat to the free printing also many made information technology out to be," argued Weinstein, the conservative journalist. "Sometimes it'southward okay to not take his tweets literally or seriously."

Before this month, later on Trump ended his covid-nineteen infirmary stint, Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) tweeted a version of the same GIF with the CNN logo replaced by an epitome of the coronavirus.

THE POLICYMAKER

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Aaron Belkin was visiting his parents in Cleveland when a phone telephone call woke him up. An overseas announcer wanted comment well-nigh a tweet he hadn't seen withal. For Belkin, managing director of the Palm Centre, a think tank in San Francisco that promotes the study of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the military machine, that tweet aimed to destroy his life's piece of work.

"I was just kind of very sad and upset merely had to put the emotions aside to deal with the crisis," Belkin said. "If you can ban LGBT people from the military, that will accept ripple effects across the rest of government and society. And it sets a precedent for discrimination in other realms like health-intendance insurance and various civil rights."

The tweets shocked many people, especially since Trump had called himself a "existent friend" to the community while on the campaign trail. Only it likewise led to logistical questions: Were these tweets an official statement of policy?

"It was unclear what information technology was. It contradicted some of what the military was doing, and it sowed a lot of confusion," Zelizer said. But "by putting something out there, it'south so a discussion. And y'all're forcing the military to respond and to bargain with this themselves, and you don't have to exist the person doing it."

The tweets were afterwards used against the president in a protracted legal battle as he attempted to implement his proposed ban, one of several times his online statements undercut his policy proposals in court.

THE THREAT

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Trump doesn't employ his Twitter business relationship just to denote unformed policy. He also uses it for international affairs with all the finesse of a shock jock, every bit seen two days into 2018, when he tweeted this implicit threat.

This was "a remarkable moment. Information technology took a conversation that normally would accept existed through diplomatic channels, through the Country Department, through ambassadors, through people who were trying to ratchet down tensions betwixt two nations, and instead blew it upward," said Princeton history professor Kevin Thousand. Kruse. The closest state of affairs in U.S. history he could remember was at the height of the Cold War when a hot mic caught Reagan during a sound check maxim: "I'm pleased to tell you lot today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes."

"Simply that was unintentional," Kruse said. "That was a joke. He was clearly non serious."

Others, though, debate that forgoing the usual diplomatic channels might exist an effective tactic, particularly when dealing with authoritarian regimes. Fleischer cited an argument often made on the right that the public threat frightened Kim into diplomatic conversations. "The irony of that tweet that fabricated people run for the hills thinking state of war was imminent may have very well created a much more calm atmosphere."

[More 2020 election coverage]

THE CATCHPHRASE

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Trump has always showed a fondness for the phrase, which he's tweeted more 370 times since get-go uttering it dorsum in 2011 referencing the sexual harassment allegations against Herman Cain, a businessman then seeking the Republican presidential nomination. Merely he actually began using it in earnest during the Mueller investigation, and Feb 2018 was its first solo appearance. Soon enough, he'd sent it out more than "make America great again," which he's tweeted a mere 175 times.

1 of Trump'due south strengths as a politician is his knack for coining phrases that are adored by his base and become pebbles in the shoes of his critics. Twitter is a place to try out new riffs, insulting nicknames and catchphrases, often without context — peradventure the merely platform where that's possible, since shouting them out randomly at a news briefing before walking offstage wouldn't make much sense. He'll then work them into his speeches and grin as his base chants them, "just like a stand up-up, to see what lands and what doesn't," said Weinstein.

On the other hand, some of the phrases he's created during his presidency seem less intentional. Case in point: "a very stable genius." That came at the stop of three tweets in January 2018 in which he praised his own "mental stability and intelligence."

It apace became a meme, mostly used to mock Trump, such as by superimposing those words over an image of a donkey in — you guessed it — a stable. It likewise became the title of a book well-nigh his presidency past Post reporters Carol D. Leonnig and Philip Rucker.

"Who actually calls himself a genius?" said Schnure. "Then you add the word 'stable' in front end of it, and at present you're [unintentionally] side by side-level funny. Because that's merely non an adjective you put before 'genius.' Are you lot a Mensa genius? An evil genius? Maybe. But he picked a word that in an emergency room is used to say someone is going to exist okay."

Trump has embraced the phrase, saying and tweeting it several times since, which has helped deflate its power every bit an insult.

"He knows it gets under people'southward skin, and then he's going to repeat it, have fun with people," Schnure said.

THE SURPRISE FIRING

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Historians call back President Abraham Lincoln fired Union Gen. Nathaniel Banks in a telegram. Truman canned Gen. Douglas MacArthur the same way.

Trump, all the same, became the first to dispatch with an employee via social media when he announced the ousting of then-Secretary of Country Rex Tillerson on Twitter, three hours before calling and telling him. In the intervening time, Tillerson, who had cut ties with ExxonMobil after 41 years to assume the role, merely told reporters in a statement that he "did not speak to the president, and is unaware of the reason" for his firing, but he was "grateful for the opportunity to serve."

"Even within his own administration and inside the Republican Political party, he likes to use this to keep people on their toes and to make them feel uncertain nearly what comes side by side," said Zelizer.

While it may have been an constructive display of Trump's ability, Tim Fullerton, a onetime Obama administration official, suggested that the firing had unseen ripple effects on morale. "I would have felt demoralized that the president thought and so little of my department and the leadership there that firing off a tweet announcing the firing of somebody was appropriate," he said.

THE FEARMONGERING INSULT

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Sometimes, Fleischer said, Trump "hits himself in his ain nose. … He's misused Twitter in sometimes very mean ways that hurt him more than than his intended target."

Though he didn't specifically name anyone in this tweet, it was articulate he was referring to "the squad," four progressive congresswomen of color, three of whom were born in the Usa.

Zelizer said Trump's animosity toward the team seemed like an try to paint the Autonomous Party as radical, a tactic he's continued in his campaign against Joe Biden. But the backlash to this item language was swift and fierce, even within his own political party.

"This President has e'er loved to casualty on people's fears," one of the squad members, Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), recalled via email, later calculation: "People like me accept ever been the targets of his well-nigh xenophobic, racist attacks. Just we aren't going anywhere."

One of Trump's most divisive traits on Twitter is his willingness to bung insults — ofttimes offensive, sometimes racist and misogynistic — at political opponents, dating back to his belligerence confronting Hillary Clinton and his Republican primary opponents.

"The attacks I get at present, in the Trump era, are very dissimilar than the attacks I got in the pre-Trump era," said Powers. "It's a consequent stream of misogyny. … It seems to be a real tactic."

"He was really working to tap into some of the stereotypes and ideas that people already have virtually women of color, seeing them as angry, loud, disruptive, united nations-American, and undeserving of this country's resources and attention," said Sherri Williams, a professor of race, media and advice at American University. More broadly through these tweets, and those criticizing other prominent politicians of colour such equally the late congressmen John Lewis and Elijah E. Cummings, Williams said, Trump is attempting to stoke "the fears that some White people have while nosotros meet the country become more Dark-brown and Blackness every solar day."

THE RACIST RETWEET

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The golf game cart in the video bears two signs: a bluish ane reading "Trump 2020" and a red 1 reading "America First." Several more carts follow. At a glance, it looks like an innocuous parade of Trump supporters. Six seconds in, though, the first driver holds up his fist and through a mustachioed mouth yells: "White power! White power!"

That is no longer shocking in 2020 America. What is shocking is that the president retweeted it. He shortly removed the tweet, and "a White Business firm spokesman said Trump had not heard the racist language when he sent" it, as The Postal service reported.

Trump later said in an interview that "information technology's the retweets" that go him "in trouble."

Many have suggested that the president uses retweets strategically, as a way of sharing content while distancing himself from information technology — in this instance, to endorse white nationalism while retaining plausible deniability.

But virtually of the experts The Postal service consulted call back his tweets typically aren't an attempt at 4-D chess. Former Obama speechwriter David Litt, recalling his time working in the assistants, said that "political journalists tend to overestimate how strategic everyone is beingness anyway, fifty-fifty pre-Trump." Administrations spend as much, if not more, of their fourth dimension responding to events rather than planning them. "No one is playing chess. Anybody is playing Whack-a-Mole."

THE October SURPRISE

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It arrived while many were comatose, well-nigh 10 months into the pandemic: the tweet that would send the country into a panic equally it woke up. Information technology racked upwardly more than 1 million retweets, the almost of whatever during Trump's presidency. It also logged more than 1.8 meg "likes," another personal tape, though it's hard to know how many were sending all-time wishes or literally liking that the diagnosis had occurred.

Some replies wished Trump a speedy recovery. Many offered 280-character prayers. One man drew a glowing portrait. Others criticized his administration's response to the pandemic — or expressed utter fury, tweeting things one can't imagine being said to the president of the United states of america.

As reporters struggled to trace his health status and the disease's spread through the White Firm, the tweet offered one vital piece of data: a timestamp, the irrefutable constant.

Trump was cleared to leave Walter Reed National Military Medical Eye on Oct. 5. He sent the news in a tweet.

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Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2020/technology/trump-twitter-tweets-president/

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