Donald Trump says he uses Twitter as ‘typewriter’

WASHINGTON D.C., May 21, 2019 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters before leaving the White House in Washington D.C., the United States, on May 20, 2019. U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday that he disagrees with a court ruling that backs a congressional subpoena seeking his financial records from an accounting firm.

San Francisco,  US President Donald Trump has said that Twitter, where his posts often circulate as memes, is nothing more than just a “typewriter” to him.

Trump spoke about his “Twitter Theory” during an interview with Fox News Channel, CNN reported on Monday.

“Twitter is really a typewriter for me. It’s really not Twitter — it’s — Twitter goes on television, or if they have breaking news, I’ll tweet, I’ll say ‘Watch this — boom.’ That’s not to build Twitter.

“That’s to say that as soon as it goes out, it goes on television, it goes on Facebook, it goes all over the place and it’s instant — it really is, to me it’s a modern way to communicate,” the report quoted the US President as saying.

From his statement it stands clear that Trump tweets using his personal account to make sure that things are noticed distinctly.

Irrespective of his 60.4 million followers, Trump has been regularly pulled out for posting controversial statements and war threats with Iran and North Korea on his page.

“If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again!” Trump had tweeted recently.

Twitteratis were quick to quote Trump on his old comments where he stated that “President (Barack) Obama will attack Iran because of his inability to negotiate properly” and call him out for being a hypocrite.

On several occasions, Trump’s spelling errors have also made him trend on social networking sites.

Earlier in May, he misspelled the word “stolen” as “stollen” — which is a type of fruit bread served in Germany on Christmas.

Twitter, with over 330 million global users, went ablaze with memes and the word “stollen” along with images of the German fruit bread went viral.

Previous articleUN cuts India’s growth rate by 0.6%, but at 7% it retains top spot
Next articleKamala Harris announces plan to close gender pay gap