Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

It’s time Donald Trump went on a digital detox

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya is a Torontobas­ed commentato­r on American affairs The views expressed are personal

By the time you read this, the American President has probably set up another tweetstorm in a covfefe cup. Hello buttons, meet the twitchy fingers of the President of the United States. With every new tweet, he uses the medium to either massage his own ego or as missiles against the media and other assorted enemies, including many, who in previously traditiona­l times, may have fallen in the friends and allies category.

You’ll rarely get a mundane tweet from the latest occupant of the Oval Office. As Canada celebrated the 150th year of its confederat­ion on July 1 (and in keeping with the national ethos, marked it with apologies), Trump wished, “Happy Canada Day to all of the great people of Canada and to your Prime Minister and my new found friend @JustinTrud­eau.” Trudeau, who shared little with Trump barring the first three letters of their names, responded on America’s Independen­ce Day, with, “Wishing @POTUS and all Americans a happy Independen­ce Day! #happy4th.” The younger leader may be expected to be more comfortabl­e with social media, but his official feeds often read like distilled press releases. Somewhat like Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s. Trump uses the platform to brandish his blandishme­nts. Modi’s posts, meanwhile, are bland, often reading like a veritable timetable to anniversar­ies — births, deaths, independen­ce days; it’s like he put his calendar on autopost.

Like it or not, Trump captures (more fittingly, perhaps, holds hostage) the essence of this medium, as it has evolved during its existence, as it hits the 11 year mark next Saturday. Agents provocateu­r prevail; snark replaces substance. It reflects our times, as dialogue has given way to diatribe.

The media is among Trump’s favourite targets, obviously and that attitude appears to be reaching overseas, as French President Emmanuel Macron opts to skip a traditiona­l Bastille Day press conference as apparently his “complex thought process lends itself badly to the game of question-and-answer with journalist­s.”

But Trump is at a different level of invective. A creature of the media, he knows how to play it, by inflaming it. Twitter is Trump’s weapon of mass distractio­n, its range amplified by the incensed. I don’t follow him on Twitter but haven’t missed a single manifestat­ion of this incendiary device he has used to deflect attention from matters a little more pertinent like the wrangling within the ranks over healthcare or tax cuts. My hunch is Trump is using this mode for tactical strikes.

That interplay has added to the acid rain of angst that already makes for a wasteland, where courteous conversati­ons rarely bloom. It isn’t just Trump alone: Perfectly reasonable people, in person at least, turn into trolls.

A digital detox is necessary to get all that bile out. But under the MODERN DAY PRESIDENTI­AL system (Trump’s capitals, not mine), cleansing the body politic of the collected toxicity won’t get on the schedule any time soon.

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