Tensions were already sky-high. Then Donald Trump hit “post.” In the middle of a potential military showdown with Iran, the former president published a Truth Social statement so riddled with bizarre wording and glaring errors that critics wondered if it had been written in a panic. Within hours, the original was gone. But the screenshots were alrea… Continues…
Trump’s message came at a moment when every syllable mattered: he claimed the US and Iran had held “very good and productive conversations” and that he’d ordered the “Department of War” to delay strikes on Iranian power plants. Instead of calming fears, the post ignited a different kind of alarm. Users zoomed in on phrases like “I am please to report” and the misuse of “witch,” reading the sloppiness as a sign of chaos behind the scenes.
Though Trump quickly deleted the all-caps original and uploaded a polished version, the damage was done. The screenshots spread faster than any correction, feeding a narrative that his communication in moments of crisis is impulsive and error-prone. In a conflict where a single misstep could have catastrophic consequences, it wasn’t the threat of airstrikes that dominated the conversation—but the man at the keyboard, and what his words revealed.