trump draft!

Posted on Wed, 09/04/2019 - 19:02 by deculton

Trump. The American president who uses Twitter to spout nonsense and demonstrate to everyone that he has, at best, a lacking understanding of American and global politics today. But what do other people on Twitter think of him? His simplistic and impulsive approach to life and politics seems to embody the way many people view internet discourse. But do they accept him and his outlook, or do they reject him the way most sane people have? Perhaps more importantly, why do they talk about Trump? And who are the people actually doing the talking? 

In order to find out more, I decided to study people using the hashtag "Trump". To do this, simply put, I harvested all the tweets with #Trump from a week, deleted the retweets, deleted the tweets that weren't in English, and chose the 100 most recent tweets from those remaining. From there, I sorted each tweet based on a few categories: the opinion on trump, if the tweet came from within the US, the main method of persuasion, and the perceived purpose of the tweet. Regarding perceived purpose, I created 5 categories that I noticed tweets seeming to fall into, exposing, informing, persuading, and insulting. 

Informing tweets were primarily factual, and difficult to tell if they were for or against Trump. Exposing tweets told information about Trump often phrased in a way that seemed intended to reveal Trump's embarrassing behavior. Persuading tweets coupled information with a stance, and were often less emotionally charges than exposing tweets. Insulting tweets seemed to not have any substance and instead were intended as cheap shots against Trump.


Who is Tweeting Using #Trump?

To start, I want to examine who exactly is tweeting about Trump.

This is a bar graph tracking if the Tweets came from within the US. 38 Tweets reportedly came from within the US as opposed to 27 from outside the US.
Figure 1: Bar Chart of the Perceived Purpose of the Tweets

I decided to track where people were tweeting from, wondering if Trump Tweets were primarily from the US or outside the US. Out of the 100 tweets I examined, 65 reported the location. Of those, 38 came from within the US and 27 came from outside the US. This wasn't what I expected. I had anticipated that a higher percentage of tweets would have come from within the US. After all, Trump is the American president. However, I'm not that surprised that a fair amount of Tweets came from outside the US. Our world is extremely interconnected and Trump's actions and behavior affect people around the world. 

 



Wrap-Up

Overall, my findings were that most Tweets came from within the US and opposed Trump. Tweets tended to use pathos and were intended to persuade the reader one way or another about Trump. However, it is important to note that my sample was not large, I only analyzed 100 Tweets. Also, I only analyzed Tweets from August 26th, 2019. Additionally, this summary does not capture all Tweets that were about Trump, it exclusively examined Tweets with #Trump in them.