Today's peaceful inauguration of President Donald J. Trump won't stop disgruntled government employees from passive aggressively using Twitter.
Though today is sex videos bangbooroos free downlodsupposed to represent a calm transition of power, at least one branch of the government decided to flex its social media presence and point out some negative aspects about the incoming administration.
The National Park Service, the government agency that manages all U.S. national parks, or at least the person running its Twitter account, decided not to take Trump's oath of office lying down. Though not directly tweeting anything, after the official swearing in, the account retweeted two tweets that carried a definite partisan bias, pretty unusual for a government agency.
The first retweet shared by the agency was an Esquire article detailing the fact that civil rights, climate change and healthcare issues no longer appear on the White House's website. The second retweet was from New York Times correspondent Binyamin Applbaum's showing two pictures comparing the size of Trump's inaugural crowd versus Obama's in 2009.
It wasn't long before the media, particularly the correspondent who was retweeted, found something unusual in the agency's social media usage.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
And it wasn't long before people started praising the agency's civil disobedience.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The retweets were eventually deleted from the account.
On Friday evening, Gizmodoreported the National Park Service had been banned from tweeting from its accounts. In a leaked email obtained by the publication, it informed the agency's staff to “immediately cease use of government Twitter accounts until further notice."
Mashable has reached out for comment from the National Park Service and will update this story with any further information.
Updated: Saturday, Jan. 21, 12 a.m.
10 beautifully weird comedy shows you can stream right nowRyon Day publicly turned down a job offer from Facebook. Here's why.'Minecraft Dungeons' aims to be more than 'baby's first Diablo'What is Blackout Tuesday and how can you participate in a helpful way?'Clubhouse Games' breathes life into old classics with fresh, calming vibes'Ramy' Season 2 is all about sitting in discomfort: ReviewTrump signs executive order targeting social media companiesTaylor Swift fans suspect her brother is singing on mysterious new trackTwitter hid Trump's violent tweet. Why won't Facebook?Bitcoin wipes coronavirus losses, passes $10,000 again 14 best tweets of the week, including autocorrect duck, Matt LeBlanc, and cicadas How to connect Google Home to Netflix HBO Max launches annual subscriptions and tiers MoviePass actively tried to stop users from seeing movies, FTC alleges Battlefield 2042 E3 2021 preview: BF2042 is a viral moments generator Apple reveals watchOS 8 at WWDC 2021 Mashable wants your post Everything Apple revealed at WWDC 2021 Uber adds more detail to its maps for smoother pickups Facebook's refusal to make a decision on Trump is flat out weak
0.1621s , 14441.40625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex videos bangbooroos free downlod】Enter to watch online.Someone at the National Park Service is obviously not happy about Trump's inauguration,