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President Donald Trump was excoriated on social media after turning his attention to Twitter during a roundtable Thursday afternoon on the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic as one attendee detailed the hardships faced by her small business due to the outbreak.
"Get off your phone and pay attention!" tweeted author Jason Cranford Teague.
\u201c@realDonaldTrump Get off your phone and pay attention!\n\nhttps://t.co/YSC7s7mMgc\u201d— Donald J. Trump (@Donald J. Trump) 1592574899
The president began scrolling through his phone as a business owner described how the pandemic has affected her company's operations, including the need for added runners and phone operators to handle social distancing requirements.
Trump's focus instead was apparently on composing a tweeted threat to China referring to Ambassador Robert Lighthizer's comments Wednesday to the House that it was unlikely the Chinese and U.S. economies could "decouple."
\u201cTrump demonstrates the depth of his empathy with two small business owners he invited to the White House by getting bored by their personal stories and taking out his phone to spend more than 3 minutes writing and sending a tweet about his China trade rep https://t.co/72c4gjtUc1\u201d— Robert Mackey (@Robert Mackey) 1592521097
"It was not Ambassador Lighthizer's fault (yesterday in Committee) in that perhaps I didn't make myself clear, but the U.S. certainly does maintain a policy option, under various conditions, of a complete decoupling from China," said the president. "Thank you!"
An avalanche of criticism quickly followed.
\u201cWho among us hasn't led the most powerful nation on earth and sneaked a peek at Twitter while in an important meeting?\u201d— Prashant \u2764\ufe0f (@Prashant \u2764\ufe0f) 1592528314
\u201cMessage: I care.\u201d— John Heilemann (@John Heilemann) 1592519029
\u201cOver 100,000 American small businesses have been run out of business since Trump disastrously mismanaged the response to COVID-19. \n\nAnd this is the level of engagement and respect he gives small business owners trying to tell him about their problems during the outbreak.\u201d— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1592526996
"He's not even trying to pretend at this point," tweetedVox journalist Aaron Rupar.
Political revenge. Mass deportations. Project 2025. Unfathomable corruption. Attacks on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Pardons for insurrectionists. An all-out assault on democracy. Republicans in Congress are scrambling to give Trump broad new powers to strip the tax-exempt status of any nonprofit he doesn’t like by declaring it a “terrorist-supporting organization.” Trump has already begun filing lawsuits against news outlets that criticize him. At Common Dreams, we won’t back down, but we must get ready for whatever Trump and his thugs throw at us. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. By donating today, please help us fight the dangers of a second Trump presidency. |
President Donald Trump was excoriated on social media after turning his attention to Twitter during a roundtable Thursday afternoon on the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic as one attendee detailed the hardships faced by her small business due to the outbreak.
"Get off your phone and pay attention!" tweeted author Jason Cranford Teague.
\u201c@realDonaldTrump Get off your phone and pay attention!\n\nhttps://t.co/YSC7s7mMgc\u201d— Donald J. Trump (@Donald J. Trump) 1592574899
The president began scrolling through his phone as a business owner described how the pandemic has affected her company's operations, including the need for added runners and phone operators to handle social distancing requirements.
Trump's focus instead was apparently on composing a tweeted threat to China referring to Ambassador Robert Lighthizer's comments Wednesday to the House that it was unlikely the Chinese and U.S. economies could "decouple."
\u201cTrump demonstrates the depth of his empathy with two small business owners he invited to the White House by getting bored by their personal stories and taking out his phone to spend more than 3 minutes writing and sending a tweet about his China trade rep https://t.co/72c4gjtUc1\u201d— Robert Mackey (@Robert Mackey) 1592521097
"It was not Ambassador Lighthizer's fault (yesterday in Committee) in that perhaps I didn't make myself clear, but the U.S. certainly does maintain a policy option, under various conditions, of a complete decoupling from China," said the president. "Thank you!"
An avalanche of criticism quickly followed.
\u201cWho among us hasn't led the most powerful nation on earth and sneaked a peek at Twitter while in an important meeting?\u201d— Prashant \u2764\ufe0f (@Prashant \u2764\ufe0f) 1592528314
\u201cMessage: I care.\u201d— John Heilemann (@John Heilemann) 1592519029
\u201cOver 100,000 American small businesses have been run out of business since Trump disastrously mismanaged the response to COVID-19. \n\nAnd this is the level of engagement and respect he gives small business owners trying to tell him about their problems during the outbreak.\u201d— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1592526996
"He's not even trying to pretend at this point," tweetedVox journalist Aaron Rupar.
President Donald Trump was excoriated on social media after turning his attention to Twitter during a roundtable Thursday afternoon on the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic as one attendee detailed the hardships faced by her small business due to the outbreak.
"Get off your phone and pay attention!" tweeted author Jason Cranford Teague.
\u201c@realDonaldTrump Get off your phone and pay attention!\n\nhttps://t.co/YSC7s7mMgc\u201d— Donald J. Trump (@Donald J. Trump) 1592574899
The president began scrolling through his phone as a business owner described how the pandemic has affected her company's operations, including the need for added runners and phone operators to handle social distancing requirements.
Trump's focus instead was apparently on composing a tweeted threat to China referring to Ambassador Robert Lighthizer's comments Wednesday to the House that it was unlikely the Chinese and U.S. economies could "decouple."
\u201cTrump demonstrates the depth of his empathy with two small business owners he invited to the White House by getting bored by their personal stories and taking out his phone to spend more than 3 minutes writing and sending a tweet about his China trade rep https://t.co/72c4gjtUc1\u201d— Robert Mackey (@Robert Mackey) 1592521097
"It was not Ambassador Lighthizer's fault (yesterday in Committee) in that perhaps I didn't make myself clear, but the U.S. certainly does maintain a policy option, under various conditions, of a complete decoupling from China," said the president. "Thank you!"
An avalanche of criticism quickly followed.
\u201cWho among us hasn't led the most powerful nation on earth and sneaked a peek at Twitter while in an important meeting?\u201d— Prashant \u2764\ufe0f (@Prashant \u2764\ufe0f) 1592528314
\u201cMessage: I care.\u201d— John Heilemann (@John Heilemann) 1592519029
\u201cOver 100,000 American small businesses have been run out of business since Trump disastrously mismanaged the response to COVID-19. \n\nAnd this is the level of engagement and respect he gives small business owners trying to tell him about their problems during the outbreak.\u201d— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1592526996
"He's not even trying to pretend at this point," tweetedVox journalist Aaron Rupar.