One unusual theory of Trump’s disappearance is that his ban on Twitter (and other social media sites) has reduced his ability to succeed in a wide audience. With the Twitter account at your fingertips, you can blow up any brain or rant that kept it in the brain in front of millions of followers; the press would diligently report on the most recent scandal and the speech surrounding it. In addition to the credibility of the theory, Trump’s eclipse would begin around January 8, when Twitter announced the ban.
Trump obviously misses the feeling of tweeting and getting quick feedback. He sends emails regularly, infrequently several a day, to journalists, probably in the hope that they will tweet them, but it is not the same. freed from the 280-character limitations, it has a tendency to wander into the kind of inconsistency that manifests itself during its rallies. On the other hand, emotions that have gained some understanding on social media become disembodied and absurd when they land on me (Why is Trump sending precisely this praise to Stephen Miller?Did I miss something, or did he?)
This obsolescence happens to each and every president once he leaves the workplace, even those, like Bill Clinton, who leave their popular positions, what Trump has never been. Throughout his political career, Trump has acted as if he were immune not only to legality. consequences of his actions, but also of all traditional policy regulations, and controlled to convince many experts that this was true. So far, he has controlled to circumvent the law, but regulations have already hit him.