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Well, it certainly sounds like something he'd tweet
Posted by BearPaw/CO of CO on 2/7/18 11:47am Msg #71467
Fake Trump tweet about ‘Dow Joans’ dropping called for Trump to be shot from a cannon into sun

By Amy Sherman on Tuesday, February 6th, 2018 at 12:14 p.m. Yahoo

As the Dow Jones plunged Feb. 5, not long after President Donald Trump boasted about the stock market gains, a fake Trump tweet surfaced in which he vowed that such a drop in the "Dow Joans" should result in the president being shot out of a cannon into the sun.

Though it was a hoax, that didn’t stop the Twitterverse from going nuts over it. Feb. 5, Shaun Usher, who lives in Manchester, England, and author of the Letters of Note website, wrote on Twitter: "There’s *always* a tweet," and then linked to a supposed Trump tweet from Feb. 15, 2015: "If the Dow Joans ever falls more than 1000 ‘points’ in a Single Day the sitting president should be 'loaded' into a very big cannon and Shot into the sun at TREMENDOUS SPEED! No excuses!"

The tweet took off, and within 19 hours drew more than 22,000 retweets and 47,000 likes.

Minutes later, Usher followed up by making it clear the tweet was a hoax:

"Sweet mother of god. Not for one second did I think people would believe that to be genuine."

"omg it's everywhere. What have I done."

"siri can i be arrested for making a fake tweet."

Some users on Twitter called on Usher to delete the tweet. He replied:

"Many people asking why I haven't taken it down. Literally within minutes of me posting it, it had legs. It was everywhere within about 10mins. I had lost control of it in an instant. Deleting mine--its place of birth--felt wrong & maybe more dangerous?"

Many in the Twitterverse seemed to realize it was a hoax and enjoyed the joke:

"You just gained a follower. Me. Thanks for the laugh."

"Does this mean he's NOT getting shot out of a cannon??" tweeted another with a sad face emoji.

"We will build a sun cannon, and we will have the sun people pay for it," one tweeted, a reference to Trump’s plan to build a wall at the border of Mexico and make Mexico pay for it.

Some in the twitterverse adopted an investigative tone and noted that the alleged Trump tweet had more than 140 characters, which wasn’t possible in 2015.

Another took a scientific approach:

"Important question: would one want said president to make it to the sun, or simply impart the amount of inertia required to get something of their mass to the sun? One is much more complex the other and could create many jobs," linking to a diagram and math formula for shooting Trump to the sun.

Some on Twitter appeared to fall for the hoax:

"OMG, did the dumb SOB really spell it ‘Joans’?"

"Is this real?"

"Oops. I fell for it."

It wasn’t a surprise that someone poked fun at Trump for the stock market drop after Trump had repeatedly touted gains in the stock market.

On Jan. 5, Trump tweeted that the Dow Jones Industrial Average "jumped 1000 points in last 5 weeks, Record fastest 1000 point move in history." We rated that statement True, though no president can take full credit for the economy.

Trump made a comment about stock market records in Nashville days later and again Jan. 26 in a speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Usher has been critical of Trump in the past. Hours before Usher posted the fake tweet, he bashed Trump over his criticism of the UK health care system. In January, Usher called Trump the "dumbest sack of meat" in response to his comments about climate change.







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Messages in this Thread
 Three reasons why Presidents... - MikeC/TX on 2/6/18 6:16pm
 Re: Three reasons why Presidents... - MikeC/TX on 2/6/18 11:04pm
 Well, it certainly sounds like something he'd tweet - BearPaw/CO on 2/7/18 11:47am
 Re: Well, it certainly sounds like something he - MikeC/TX on 2/8/18 3:42pm



 
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