Politicians using kids to improve their image is nothing new, but the White House's current technique is gross.
In an attempt to shine a positive light on Trump after weeks of controversy -- the failed GOP health care bills, Anthony Scaramucci's foul mouth, Russia, Russia, Russia -- the White House communications team has been reading letters that stroke the president's ego during press briefings. Sure, politicians have meet and greets with kids all the time, but using a kid's letter to say, "hey, people like President Trump" is a gross waste of everyone's time.
And before we get into the nitty-gritty of these letters, which have now been featured two times in as many weeks, let's get this out of the way: Obama also leveraged letters from kids for political points. But those letters were meant to further a policy agenda -- if you're against that kind of strategy too, that's understandable -- while the letters cherrypicked by the Trump team just praise Trump.
"To remind us a little bit more often about some of the forgotten men, women, and children that we're here to serve and the president is fighting for," White House Spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders explained last week, "we're going to start the White House briefing every once in a while with a letter or an email we may receive from some of those emails."
SEE ALSO: The White House didn't want to talk about the transgender ban, so it just read a letter from a child insteadSanders then read a letter from a 9-year-old boy nicknamed Pickle. The letter itself was quite adorable, though many debated the authenticity of the letter.
"I don't know why people don't like you?" The little boy asked. "You seem really nice, can we be friends?"
Sanders then offered the president's friendship to Pickle, and an open invite to visit the White House.
Sanders read another letter from a 10-year-old named Frank on Wednesday, who talked about his young landscaping business and offered to mow the White House lawn.
Tweet may have been deleted
Trump wished the boy a happy birthday, and invited him to spend a morning with the White House groundskeeper, Sanders said.
The White House receiving and responding to letters from the kids of America is somewhat of a tradition, but those letters don't need to be read at the press briefing.
'You seem really nice, can we be friends?
While Sanders left this new letter-reading practice open to hear from all Americans, we haven't heard from anyone but kids. And using children to distract from the most recent scandal or firing is low, even for Trump.
The White House maintains the kid's anonymity in order to protect them. But in doing so it also cast's doubt on the letter's authenticity.
People questioned both Pickle and Frank's letters, and given the language used in both, it's hard to imagine a kid wrote the letter all by themselves. President Trump has made up people to boast his good image in the past, what's stopping him from doing it now?
Tweet may have been deleted
While the letters may be heartwarming at face, why should we care what a 10-year-old thinks of the president? They're 10 -- it's safe to assume the majority of their opinions are just relayed from their parents.
Instead of reading letters from kids, the press secretary could try answering questions from the press, instead of avoiding them.
It's propaganda. It's a distraction. It's not cute. It's cheap.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
White House reading letters from kids is a cheap form of distraction-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
5449
浏览
5
获赞
6
Donald Trump is back on Twitch after a short ban for ‘hateful conduct’
How long will you get banned from Twitch for disparaging immigrants on multiple livestreams?The answInstagram cracks down on 'inappropriate' content
Instagram is taking new steps to limit the reach of content it deems "inappropriate."The app will noMicrosoft pulls Huawei laptops from official online store
Microsoft has removed Huawei's Windows laptops from the company's online store following the Trump aOnePlus 7 ad drops the phone in water, but you still shouldn't
A new advertisement for the OnePlus 7 series smartphone suggests that you can just drop the phone inTwitter's audio tweets reveal a bigger accessibility problem
Twitter started rolling out a brand new featureearlier this week that allowed iOS users to share recHugh Hefner's death sparked Twitter praise and criticism from celebrities
The announcement of Hugh Hefner's death on Wednesday sparked a wide range of emotions from those whoThere are lots of theories about the Kardashian/Jenner babies, and here are our favorites
Keeping up with the Kardashians has never been more challenging than now. In the past few months&mdaHere's why San Francisco's vote to ban facial
San Francisco just voted to ban facial-recognition technology.The city that has for many come to symFacebook launches 'Facebook Shops' for more in
Facebook just made it way easier to spend your money on Instagram. On Tuesday, Facebook, which ownsReport: Apple to split iTunes into separate apps
The lumbering behemoth that is iTunes may finally be nearing the end of its life.According to 9to5MaByton dramatically tests upcoming electric car in snowy Inner Mongolia
It's a common pre-launch ritual for a new car to get sent somewhere remote and desolate to see how iHere's one birthday cake Pinterest fail that will give you nightmares
Baking a cake that looks like an iconic character most of the world knows and loves is not a good idLinkedIn says its extra intense clipboard snooping in iOS is a bug
LinkedIn's iOS app has taken the ongoing issue of snooping at users' clipboards to whole, new level.Here's what Donald Trump had to say in response to the Las Vegas
The morning after a shooter opened fire at a concert in Las Vegas, killing at least 50 and woundingLyft is testing out a car rentals program in San Francisco
Lyft is looking for ways to diversify its business.The ride-share company has already invested in sc