As traditional platforms stay silent, Trump Truth Social threats Iran highlight a major shift in political communication, platform accountability, and global messaging power.
President Donald Trump’s warning that “a whole civilization will die” is the starkest example yet of his use of his personal online platform to threaten his enemies — unencumbered by the social media restrictions that once hampered him.
Unlike six years ago, when Trump’s posts about shooting looters in Minnesota, the 2020 election, or COVID-19 misinformation drew penalties from Twitter and Facebook, the president faced no repercussions Tuesday for his latest Truth Social post threatening reprisals against Iran. Meanwhile, dominant social media networks have remained largely silent.
On Truth Social — a service he launched more than a year after his first term ended — Trump has a megaphone to publish whatever message he chooses, which is then amplified by media outlets around the world.
Because Trump sets the rules, he knows his content will remain online regardless of what standards other platforms might enforce, said Katie Harbath, a tech consultant and former longtime public policy director at Facebook’s parent company, Meta.
“From a strategic standpoint, it gives him the most leverage for getting his messages out without having to worry about whether others who control different platforms will allow him the reach he wants,” Harbath said.
Regarding Tuesday’s Iran post, she added: “If this had happened during his first term, I think people would have been much more worked up over whether a post like this should stay up.”
Truth Social has a relatively small user base — an estimated 6.3 million active users as of a year ago, compared with Facebook’s 3 billion monthly users — and drew strong reviews after its launch, including some private frustration from Trump himself.
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