When Government Messaging Turns Into Propaganda– A Twitter Feed of Fear and Fascism
If you want to understand how the United States became a global punchline, don’t start with the policies—start with the tone. Since Donald Trump returned to office, the official White House Twitter account has become less of a communications tool and more of a megaphone for hardline extremism. The posts are no longer about transparency, diplomacy, or informing the public. They read like state-run propaganda, drenched in cruelty and soaked with celebration over deportations, detainments, and intimidation.
Some new artwork at the White House 👀 pic.twitter.com/l6u5u7k82T
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 11, 2025
From ICE to Internet Clout: Weaponizing Social Media
What once served as a formal digital window into the U.S. presidency has turned into a chaos stream of right-wing chest-beating. Whether it’s flaunting deportation flights like it’s influencer content or hopping on internet trends like AI-generated Ghibli visuals—only to link them to ICE raids—the account feels more like a frat house with unchecked power than the communication arm of the world’s most powerful government. Immigration policy has been reduced to meme fodder. Human suffering, it seems, is now part of the aesthetic.
https://t.co/PVdINmsHXs pic.twitter.com/Bw5YUCI2xL
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) March 27, 2025
The Mask Is Off—And It’s Ugly
The government’s online voice no longer attempts subtlety—it thrives on mean-spirited bravado. The African American community, LGBTQ+ community, immigrants, and the economically vulnerable are treated not just as policy subjects, but as punchlines.
🎶"Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey, goodbye" @CBP pic.twitter.com/4bcfAxy2gz
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 6, 2025
It’s a “screw you, got mine” ethos taken mainstream, all while the Democratic establishment barely lifts a finger to counter the cultural shift.
How Far Is Too Far?
While of course this is about tweets– as any average American posting such chum would be subjected to re-course and consequences. This is about the normalization of hate coming directly from federal platforms.
When the White House itself is pumping out content soaked in malicious enjoyment, the line between governance and bullying blurs. What we’re seeing is not just a social media misstep—it’s a symptom of something much darker: a government no longer interested in hiding its worst impulses.
This isn’t just a bad look. It’s a warning.