Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Think before you tweet,’ Obama warns while speaking in India

- By Annie Gowen

Former President Barack Obama made a few pointed jibes — without actually naming President Donald Trump — in remarks in New Delhi on Friday, taking on social media, climate-change deniers and religious intoleranc­e.

In a discussion period at a leadership forum, the former president was asked about his wife Michelle’s comments this week during a speech in Toronto, when she said it was not a good idea to “tweet from bed,” an obvious commentary on Mr. Trump’s early morning Twitter habit.

“Michelle was giving the general idea ... don’t say the first thing that pops in your head. Have a little bit of an edit function,” he said. “Think before you speak, think before you tweet.”

The former president got a laugh when he pointed out that he has 100 million followers — “more than other people who use it more often.”

Actually, Mr. Trump has 44 million followers, Mr.

Obama 97 million.

On the subject of climate change, Mr. Obama described the Paris agreement to limit carbon emissions as giving children a “fighting chance,” although “we have a little bit of pause in American leadership.” Mr. Trump announced earlier this year that the United States would be withdrawin­g from the agreement, in which countries gave voluntary pledges to limit their greenhouse gas emissions in coming decades. Mr. Obama praised India for its role in the Paris accords and said he couldn’t have a debate with people who claimed climate change was not real. Mr. Trump has said that climate change is a hoax caused by China.

Mr. Obama also said he had “privately” raised the issue of religious intoleranc­e with India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi. Mr. Modi is a Hindu nationalis­t whose more radical supporters have been accused of inflaming tensions with Muslims and other minority communitie­s in Hindu-majority India.

“A country shouldn’t be divided on sectarian lines, and that is something I have told Prime Minister Modi in person ... People see the difference­s between each other much too vividly and miss the commonalit­ies,” Mr. Obama said.

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