Here's a story that captures how Donald Trump thinks about his place in history. During a White House tour with Fox News host Jesse Watters, the president stood beside the encased Gettysburg Address and made an observation about his own communication style.
The Comparison
Watters shared the moment at Turning Point USA's AmericaFest 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. Standing next to Abraham Lincoln's historic speech, Trump told him: "You know, Jesse, some people say my Twitter account is the modern-day equivalent of the Gettysburg Address."
Watters responded with what we were all thinking: "I said, 'some people, meaning you?'"
This exchange happened before Elon Musk bought Twitter and transformed it into X, and before Trump created his own social platform, Truth Social.
Why This Actually Matters
Love it or hate it, there's something to the comparison beyond the obvious audacity. Trump's Twitter posts are indeed preserved by the National Archives and Records Administration, just like Lincoln's iconic speech. They'll exist as long as the nation does, offering future historians a direct window into how a president communicated with the public.
The moment underscores Trump's view of social media as a historical tool, not just a communication platform. His eventual launch of Truth Social and Twitter's evolution into X under Musk's ownership have only reinforced how these platforms shape public discourse and political messaging in ways Lincoln never could have imagined.




