Trump’s social media summit was a circus. Its aftermath was even worse. - 8 minutes read
Trump’s social media summit was a circus. Its aftermath was even worse.
The extent to which President Donald Trump has emboldened and empowered fringe views wasn’t just on full view Thursday during a White House social media summit that featured many far-right conspiracy theorists and hoaxers — it was perfectly captured by the conduct of one attendee.
The day before the summit, former White House aide Sebastian Gorka was widely ridiculed for making an absurd claim on his radio show that the US women’s national soccer team was seeking “to destroy everything that is wholesome in our country and in our Judeo-Christian civilization.” But on Thursday, Gorka — back in the White House as an invited guest — was praised for doing a “good job” by the president before going on to verbally harass a member of the White House press corps.
Trump ended his speech at the summit — one that largely centered on a baseless conspiracy theory about Twitter conspiring to suppress his follower count — by taking a question from and praising Gorka, who despite working at the White House in the early days of the Trump administration introduced himself as though the president didn’t know who he was. In a less amusing twist, Gorka followed that up by nearly instigating a physical altercation on White House grounds with a member of the White House press corps.
Gorka and other far-right media personalities were given choice seats for Trump’s brief Rose Garden event in which he announced he’s giving up his quest to add a citizenship question to the census but will try to gather citizenship information by other means. Right after it ended, Gorka strode up to Playboy reporter Brian Karem, a fixture of the White House press corps who at times has been an outspoken critic of the Trump administration, and called him a “punk.”
“And for the record, he would kick your punk ass,” another summit attendee said to Karem, as others chanted “Gor-ka! Gor-ka!”
The surreal scene was filmed by New York Times White House correspondent Katie Rogers:
Additional footage shows that Karem mocked Gorka and other people who were there for the summit before Gorka approached him, saying, “This is a group of people that are eager for demonic possession.” But nothing Karem did warranted Gorka — who was also filmed at the White House on Thursday calling journalists “asshats” — confronting him in a manner that could have easily spiraled into a physical altercation in the Rose Garden.
CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta tweeted that “West Wing aides did nothing” to prevent Gorka and others from “verbally abus[ing] reporters who were trying to do their jobs,” and characterized the scene as a “good snapshot of how press is treated” by the White House. Nikki Schwab of the New York Post reported that Acosta was verbally harassed by right-wing conspiracy theorist Mark Dice, who shouted at him and ridiculed the fact that his new book only spent two weeks on the best-sellers list.
And it wasn’t just fringe characters like Gorka and Dice who used their invite to the White House to unload on members of the press. During remarks he gave during the summit, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) smeared “the fake media” before pushing unfounded claims that social media companies are biased against conservatives. (On the contrary, the daily list of most-read news articles on Facebook is routinely dominated by right-wing authors and publishers like Ben Shapiro, Fox News, and the Daily Caller.)
It was ugly. It was paranoid. It demeaned the White House. It was also entirely in step with the Trump administration and Trump’s Republican Party.
The Gorka-Karem altercation was a fitting end to a bizarre day at the White House. In addition to Gorka, attendees of the social media summit included disreputable conspiracy theorists such as Jim Hoft; right-wing operatives like Ali Alexander, who recently promoted the smear that Sen. Kamala Harris isn’t an “American black”; right-wing commentators Diamond and Silk, who have pushed a hoax conspiracy theory about Facebook censorship; and Charlie Kirk, who has spent years complaining, without evidence, that Twitter is suppressing his follower count. No executives from Twitter or Facebook were invited.
During his speech, Trump alleged that Twitter officials are engaged in a massive conspiracy to reduce his follower count.
“There’s no doubt in my mind that I should have millions and millions — I have millions of people, so many people I wouldn’t believe it — but I know we’ve been blocked,” Trump said. “People come up to me and they say, ‘Sir, I can’t get you, I can’t follow you. They make it impossible.’ These are people are really good at what they do. They say, ‘They make it absolutely impossible.’ And, you know, we can’t have it.”
In fact, as my colleague Emily Stewart explained when Trump pushed a similar conspiracy theory on Twitter in April, there’s a completely innocent explanation for why Trump’s follower count fluctuates — Twitter has recently undertaken efforts to purge bots from the platform:
For most people, she said it would result in a change of four followers at most, but for others with more follower counts, the drop would be more significant. Twitter estimated that the decision would reduce the total number of Twitter accounts by about 6 percent. The impact of the decision became apparent fast: The day Twitter announced it, Trump’s follower count dropped by 100,000, and former President Barack Obama’s fell by 400,000. Obama has more followers than Trump — currently, Obama has 106 million, and Trump has 60 million — which explains why Obama’s following fell more than Trump’s.
But Trump isn’t one to let facts get in the way of his victimhood narrative. And he wound down his speech on a chilling note by threatening to take action against social media executives unless they address his (baseless) bias claims.
“They’re not using what we gave them fairly and they have to do that,” Trump said. “And we don’t want to stifle anything, we certainly don’t want to stifle free speech, but that’s no longer free speech. See, I don’t think the mainstream media is free speech either because it’s so crooked, it’s so dishonest. To me, free speech is not when you see something good and then you purposely write something bad. To me, that’s very dangerous speech.”
But the very essence of free speech is having the ability to write critically about something that others deem to be good. That fundamental point, however, seems to be totally lost on the president.
In the end, the goal of the White House social media summit wasn’t actually to highlight bias that social media companies have against conservatives or other groups, because there’s no evidence such bias exists. It was to gin up right-wing outrage against both social media companies and the mainstream media. And to that end, perhaps, Trump’s mission was accomplished.
The news moves fast. To stay updated, followAaron Ruparon Twitter, and read more ofVox’s policy and politics coverage.
Source: Vox.com
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Keywords:
Social media • Donald Trump • White House • Social media • Far-right politics • Conspiracy theory • White House • United States women's national soccer team • Judeo-Christian • Role of Christianity in civilization • John Gorka • White House press corps • Donald Trump • Conspiracy theory • Twitter • Sebastian Gorka • White House • Presidency of Donald Trump • Sebastian Gorka • White House press corps • Sebastian Gorka • Far-right politics • Right Media • Donald Trump • White House Rose Garden • Census • Sebastian Gorka • Playboy • White House press corps • Presidency of Donald Trump • Punk rock • Punk subculture • Surrealism • The New York Times • White House press corps • Katie Rogers • Demonic possession • White House • White House Rose Garden • CNN • White House press corps • Jim Acosta • Twitter • The West Wing • Humber • News media • White House • New York Post • Jim Acosta • Vast right-wing conspiracy • Conspiracy theory • Mark Dice • Sebastian Gorka • White House • United States Senate • Josh Hawley • Smear campaign • Forgery • Social media • Mass media • Conservatism • Newspaper • Reading (process) • Facebook • Right-wing politics • Ben Shapiro • Fox News • The Daily Caller • Paranoia • White House • Presidency of Donald Trump • Republican Party (United States) • Sebastian Gorka • White House • Sebastian Gorka • Social media • Conspiracy theory • Right-wing politics • Smear campaign • United States Senate • Kamala Harris • Black people • Right-wing politics • Pundit • Diamond and Silk • Hoax • Conspiracy theory • Facebook • Censorship • Charlie Kirk • Twitter • Twitter • Facebook • Twitter • In My Mind (Pharrell Williams album) • Emily Stewart • Conspiracy theory • Twitter • Twitter • Twitter • Twitter • Barack Obama • Speech • Social media • Media bias • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Bad to Me • Freedom of speech • White House • Social media • Bias • Social media • Mass media • Conservatism • Social group • Evidence • Media bias • Gingering • Right-wing politics • Social media • Mass media • Mainstream media • Donald Trump • News • Twitter • Policy • Politics • News •
The extent to which President Donald Trump has emboldened and empowered fringe views wasn’t just on full view Thursday during a White House social media summit that featured many far-right conspiracy theorists and hoaxers — it was perfectly captured by the conduct of one attendee.
The day before the summit, former White House aide Sebastian Gorka was widely ridiculed for making an absurd claim on his radio show that the US women’s national soccer team was seeking “to destroy everything that is wholesome in our country and in our Judeo-Christian civilization.” But on Thursday, Gorka — back in the White House as an invited guest — was praised for doing a “good job” by the president before going on to verbally harass a member of the White House press corps.
Trump ended his speech at the summit — one that largely centered on a baseless conspiracy theory about Twitter conspiring to suppress his follower count — by taking a question from and praising Gorka, who despite working at the White House in the early days of the Trump administration introduced himself as though the president didn’t know who he was. In a less amusing twist, Gorka followed that up by nearly instigating a physical altercation on White House grounds with a member of the White House press corps.
Gorka and other far-right media personalities were given choice seats for Trump’s brief Rose Garden event in which he announced he’s giving up his quest to add a citizenship question to the census but will try to gather citizenship information by other means. Right after it ended, Gorka strode up to Playboy reporter Brian Karem, a fixture of the White House press corps who at times has been an outspoken critic of the Trump administration, and called him a “punk.”
“And for the record, he would kick your punk ass,” another summit attendee said to Karem, as others chanted “Gor-ka! Gor-ka!”
The surreal scene was filmed by New York Times White House correspondent Katie Rogers:
Additional footage shows that Karem mocked Gorka and other people who were there for the summit before Gorka approached him, saying, “This is a group of people that are eager for demonic possession.” But nothing Karem did warranted Gorka — who was also filmed at the White House on Thursday calling journalists “asshats” — confronting him in a manner that could have easily spiraled into a physical altercation in the Rose Garden.
CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta tweeted that “West Wing aides did nothing” to prevent Gorka and others from “verbally abus[ing] reporters who were trying to do their jobs,” and characterized the scene as a “good snapshot of how press is treated” by the White House. Nikki Schwab of the New York Post reported that Acosta was verbally harassed by right-wing conspiracy theorist Mark Dice, who shouted at him and ridiculed the fact that his new book only spent two weeks on the best-sellers list.
And it wasn’t just fringe characters like Gorka and Dice who used their invite to the White House to unload on members of the press. During remarks he gave during the summit, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) smeared “the fake media” before pushing unfounded claims that social media companies are biased against conservatives. (On the contrary, the daily list of most-read news articles on Facebook is routinely dominated by right-wing authors and publishers like Ben Shapiro, Fox News, and the Daily Caller.)
It was ugly. It was paranoid. It demeaned the White House. It was also entirely in step with the Trump administration and Trump’s Republican Party.
The Gorka-Karem altercation was a fitting end to a bizarre day at the White House. In addition to Gorka, attendees of the social media summit included disreputable conspiracy theorists such as Jim Hoft; right-wing operatives like Ali Alexander, who recently promoted the smear that Sen. Kamala Harris isn’t an “American black”; right-wing commentators Diamond and Silk, who have pushed a hoax conspiracy theory about Facebook censorship; and Charlie Kirk, who has spent years complaining, without evidence, that Twitter is suppressing his follower count. No executives from Twitter or Facebook were invited.
During his speech, Trump alleged that Twitter officials are engaged in a massive conspiracy to reduce his follower count.
“There’s no doubt in my mind that I should have millions and millions — I have millions of people, so many people I wouldn’t believe it — but I know we’ve been blocked,” Trump said. “People come up to me and they say, ‘Sir, I can’t get you, I can’t follow you. They make it impossible.’ These are people are really good at what they do. They say, ‘They make it absolutely impossible.’ And, you know, we can’t have it.”
In fact, as my colleague Emily Stewart explained when Trump pushed a similar conspiracy theory on Twitter in April, there’s a completely innocent explanation for why Trump’s follower count fluctuates — Twitter has recently undertaken efforts to purge bots from the platform:
For most people, she said it would result in a change of four followers at most, but for others with more follower counts, the drop would be more significant. Twitter estimated that the decision would reduce the total number of Twitter accounts by about 6 percent. The impact of the decision became apparent fast: The day Twitter announced it, Trump’s follower count dropped by 100,000, and former President Barack Obama’s fell by 400,000. Obama has more followers than Trump — currently, Obama has 106 million, and Trump has 60 million — which explains why Obama’s following fell more than Trump’s.
But Trump isn’t one to let facts get in the way of his victimhood narrative. And he wound down his speech on a chilling note by threatening to take action against social media executives unless they address his (baseless) bias claims.
“They’re not using what we gave them fairly and they have to do that,” Trump said. “And we don’t want to stifle anything, we certainly don’t want to stifle free speech, but that’s no longer free speech. See, I don’t think the mainstream media is free speech either because it’s so crooked, it’s so dishonest. To me, free speech is not when you see something good and then you purposely write something bad. To me, that’s very dangerous speech.”
But the very essence of free speech is having the ability to write critically about something that others deem to be good. That fundamental point, however, seems to be totally lost on the president.
In the end, the goal of the White House social media summit wasn’t actually to highlight bias that social media companies have against conservatives or other groups, because there’s no evidence such bias exists. It was to gin up right-wing outrage against both social media companies and the mainstream media. And to that end, perhaps, Trump’s mission was accomplished.
The news moves fast. To stay updated, followAaron Ruparon Twitter, and read more ofVox’s policy and politics coverage.
Source: Vox.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Social media • Donald Trump • White House • Social media • Far-right politics • Conspiracy theory • White House • United States women's national soccer team • Judeo-Christian • Role of Christianity in civilization • John Gorka • White House press corps • Donald Trump • Conspiracy theory • Twitter • Sebastian Gorka • White House • Presidency of Donald Trump • Sebastian Gorka • White House press corps • Sebastian Gorka • Far-right politics • Right Media • Donald Trump • White House Rose Garden • Census • Sebastian Gorka • Playboy • White House press corps • Presidency of Donald Trump • Punk rock • Punk subculture • Surrealism • The New York Times • White House press corps • Katie Rogers • Demonic possession • White House • White House Rose Garden • CNN • White House press corps • Jim Acosta • Twitter • The West Wing • Humber • News media • White House • New York Post • Jim Acosta • Vast right-wing conspiracy • Conspiracy theory • Mark Dice • Sebastian Gorka • White House • United States Senate • Josh Hawley • Smear campaign • Forgery • Social media • Mass media • Conservatism • Newspaper • Reading (process) • Facebook • Right-wing politics • Ben Shapiro • Fox News • The Daily Caller • Paranoia • White House • Presidency of Donald Trump • Republican Party (United States) • Sebastian Gorka • White House • Sebastian Gorka • Social media • Conspiracy theory • Right-wing politics • Smear campaign • United States Senate • Kamala Harris • Black people • Right-wing politics • Pundit • Diamond and Silk • Hoax • Conspiracy theory • Facebook • Censorship • Charlie Kirk • Twitter • Twitter • Facebook • Twitter • In My Mind (Pharrell Williams album) • Emily Stewart • Conspiracy theory • Twitter • Twitter • Twitter • Twitter • Barack Obama • Speech • Social media • Media bias • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Freedom of speech • Bad to Me • Freedom of speech • White House • Social media • Bias • Social media • Mass media • Conservatism • Social group • Evidence • Media bias • Gingering • Right-wing politics • Social media • Mass media • Mainstream media • Donald Trump • News • Twitter • Policy • Politics • News •