On any given day, President Donald Trump is known to fire off tweets that grab the attention of those inside the Beltway. On Wednesday, for example, he singled out a senator from Connecticut who "cried like a baby" and called Democrats "phony hypocrites." The day before, he defended his decision to fire the FBI director and attacked "Cryin' Chuck Schumer." Last week he praised Australia's socialized health-care system, declared that the "fake news media is officially out of control" and congratulated a morning talk show for "its unbelievable ratings hike."
But nearly 1,000 miles south of Washington, in the bar of American Legion Post 221 in the Florida Panhandle, no one seems to notice his Twitter habits.
Instead, the regulars talk about their grandkids, home-improvement projects, politics and the way things used to be in conversations peppered with curse words and crude jokes. The jukebox blares country, with some classic rock mixed in, as the bartender pours $1 draft beers and $2 mixed drinks.
No one has a Twitter account - frankly, many aren't even sure how Twitter works - although they do know it keeps getting the president into trouble.
"I wish he'd quit tweeting," Becky Corcoran, 62, a Trump-supporting retired school custodian, said last week. "Keep your mouth shut, quit tweeting. . . You're not just a businessman any more. Now you're president of the United States."
Although the president pledged to let go of his @realDonaldTrump Twitter account if elected, he has continued to tweet, insisting that it's the only way he can bypass the media and directly connect with his supporters.
A Quinnipiac University poll last month found that 68 percent of registered voters said the president should stop tweeting from his personal account. Among Republicans, opinions were split, with 47 percent saying he should continue, 47 percent saying he should stop and 6 percent not caring. A Fox News poll of Trump voters in March found that 35 percent approved of his tweets - while 51 percent wished he would be more cautious and 12 percent disapproved.
And for those who are active on Twitter, interest in Trump's tweeting is fading. The president's tweets earn far fewer likes than they did during the election - or even when he first took office, according to a Bloomberg News analysis. Those who engage with Trump are more likely to be left-leaners leveling criticism than right-leaners lavishing love, according to an analysis by the Associated Press and Cortico, a media analytics nonprofit group.
Many of those at the American Legion bar one night last week said they can't keep straight which of the president's comments were delivered in a tweet and which came in an interview, speech or formal statement. Everything melds together as they watch the news, listen to their favorite talk-radio shows or read articles posted on Facebook.
White House press secretary Sean Spicer said the president's supporters don't have to read his tweets on Twitter for them to be powerful modes of communication.
"When he tweets . . . it gets picked up by everybody, it gets read live on the news, you guys will cover it in the paper," Spicer said. "We put out a press release and it gets covered much less than when he sends a single tweet."
Here in Niceville - which replaced the town name Boggy in 1910 - questions about the president's tweets were often met with shrugs. Many said they care more about some congressional Republicans not supporting the president's full agenda, about liberals not giving Trump a fair chance and about the media seeming to ignore the victories that they see.
"I'd rather hear honest and crude than unhonest and sanitized," said Scottie Gontarek, 60, who retired after 20 years in the Air Force and is one of a handful of widows who often hang out together at the Legion post. "You might not like what he says, but he's honest."
Trump won overwhelmingly in the Panhandle, which culturally has much more in common with the southern states it borders - Alabama and Georgia - than with Miami.
Niceville is home to about 12,000 people, and is known for its annual Boggy Bayou Mullet Festival (named for a fish, not the hairstyle). Last week, fighter jets practiced overhead as students at Northwest Florida State College took finals, tourists posed for photos at an armaments museum and families gathered at a local playground.
No one could name a tweet that the president had sent recently.
Among those shopping at a local Walmart was a 56-year-old Republican who refused to vote for Trump and called his tweets "childish," along with a 29-year-old whose husband is based in South Korea and who wishes the president would be more careful with his comments, especially those about North Korea's Kim Jong Un. At a water park, a 69-year-old grandfather who voted for Trump said he had to cut back on cable news late last year for fear that the stress was hurting his health - so he's unsure what the president has been tweeting.
During a lunch rush at the chain restaurant PoFolks - "be sho' to tell yore friends how much ya enjoyed yore visit," the menu says - a 57-year-old white grandmother raising her 14-year-old grandson said she loves the president's tweets and said that the occasional typo or poor choice of words shows he's down-to-earth and not trying to "be some bigwig that thinks he's above all of us." At a nearby booth, a 56-year-old African American grandmother who is helping to raise her three grandchildren and didn't vote in November said that Trump "shouldn't even be tweeting at all."
As the night wore on at the American Legion, a light rain began to fall. Rob Orr, a 48-year-old electrician, ordered a round of Tequila Rose shots for several of the women in the bar, most of whom were old enough to be his mother.
"Tastes like a strawberry milkshake," said Lenora Ellison, 77, a retired Air Force mechanic who loves telling stories about being one of few women in the service.
Ellison thinks a lot of the nation's problems could be solved with more birth control - "and that's a position I even made on Facebook," she said - and she voted for Trump.
"He says what he thinks and doesn't flower things up," she said.
Sitting to her right is Corcoran and her husband, Kim Jones, who said he worked for General Motors in Michigan until his job was shipped overseas.
Around the corner is Jeff Gipson, a dump truck driver with triplet grandsons who said he has been mad at the government since 1978 when he graduated from high school in Michigan, volunteered for the Army and was given a date to report - only to show up and learn that doctors wouldn't allow him to go.
"We had a goodbye party with my family and friends. . . I said goodbye to my family, my friends," he said. "I think the damn government owes me a paycheck for about 40 years."
Gipson said that he's fine with Trump "speaking his mind" and doesn't think his tweets are terrible, although he doesn't follow them closely.
To Ellison's left is a 38-year-old who grew up in the Midwest and specializes in defusing bombs for the Air Force. He voted for Barack Obama in 2008, felt let down, and voted for Trump, noting the charismatic similarities between the two. He asked that his name not be published, as he's active duty and not allowed to speak to the media without permission.
Like many in the bar, he was glad to see Trump finally take action against the Syrian regime, although he thinks the president went a little light. And it was "awesome" that the military used the "mother of all bombs" against the Islamic State in Afghanistan.
"But, if I was in charge of him. . . I would be like: Kill your Twitter. Turn it off, shut it down, block, whatever," he said.
"But that's just Trump," Ellison said.
"I mean, it's a good tool to be able to mass communicate quickly," he said. "But I think knowing Trump - and this is just the way he is - he gets all 'grrrr.' He gets all hot under the collar. . . I think they're hurting him more than helping him. But it's him. I mean, at the end of the day, no one's going to tell him: 'You can't do it.' "
The Washington Post
Thu May 11 2017
Trump won overwhelmingly in the Panhandle, which culturally has much more in common with the southern states it borders - Alabama and Georgia - than with Miami.
What to watch for ahead of US presidential inauguration
Here's a timeline of events between now and inauguration day.
The battle to reduce road deaths
In Malaysia, over half a million road accidents have been recorded so far this year.
Pro-Palestinian NGOs seek court order to stop Dutch arms exports to Israel
The Dutch state, as a signatory to the 1948 Genocide Convention, has a duty to take all reasonable measures at its disposal to prevent genocide.
How quickly can Trump's Musk-led efficiency panel slash US regulations?
Moves by Trump and his appointees to eliminate existing rules will be met with legal challenges, as many progressive groups and Democratic officials have made clear.
2TM: Consultations on PTPTN loans, admission to IPTA at MOHE booth
Consultations on PTPTN loans and admission to IPTA are among services provided at the Higher Education Ministry booth.
Kampung Tanjung Kala residents affected by flooded bridge every time it rains heavily
Almost 200 residents from 60 homes in Kampung Tanjung Kala have ended up stuck when their 200-metre (m) long concrete bridge flooded.
COP29 climate summit draft proposes rich countries pay $250 billion per year
The draft finance deal criticised by both developed and developing nations.
Bomb squad sent to London's Gatwick Airport after terminal evacuation
This was following the discovery of a suspected prohibited item in luggage.
Kelantan urges caution amidst northeast monsoon rains
Kelantan has reminded the public in the state to refrain from outdoor activities with the arrival of the Northeast Monsoon season.
Former New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern receives UN leadership award
Former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern was given a global leadership award by the United Nations Foundation.
ICC'S arrest warrants for Netanyahu, Gallant an apt decision - PM
The decision of the ICC to issue arrest warrants against Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant is apt, said Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.
KTMB provides two additional ETS trains for Christmas, school holidays
KTMB will provide two additional ETS trains for the KL Sentral-Padang Besar route and return trips in conjunction with the holidays.
BNM'S international reserves rise to USD118 bil as at Nov 15, 2024
Malaysia's international reserves rose to US$118.0 billion as at Nov 15, 2024, up from US$117.6 billion on Oct 30, 2024.
Findings by dark energy researchers back Einstein's conception of gravity
The findings announced are part of a years-long study of the history of the cosmos focusing upon dark energy.
NRES responds to Rimbawatch press release on COP29
The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability (NRES) wishes to offer the following clarifications to the issues raised.
Online Safety Bill and Anti-Cyberbullying Laws must carefully balance rights and protections
The Online Safety Advocacy Group (OSAG) stands united with people in Malaysia in the fight against serious online harms.
Malaysia's inflation at 1.9 pct in Oct 2024 - DOSM
Malaysia's inflation rate for October 2024 has increased to 1.9 per cent, up from 1.8 per cent in September this year.
Saudi Arabia showcases Vision 2030 goals at Airshow China 2024
For the first time, Saudi Arabia is participating in the China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition held recently in Zhuhai.
King Charles' coronation cost GBP 71mil, govt accounts show
The coronation of Britain's King Charles cost taxpayers GBP72 million (US$90 million), official accounts have revealed.
Couple and associate charged with trafficking 51.9 kg of meth
A married couple and a man were charged in the Magistrate's Court here today with trafficking 51.974 kilogrammes of Methamphetamine.