social media

Right-wing influencers get new competition from an unlikely source — thanks to AI

Religion News reports the 2025 year was a year of skepticism and spectacle “with a seemingly endless flood of social media content, creators and AI slop,” but some faith-based influencers managed to cut through the inanity and art-barf with something better.

Rachel Griffin Accurso, 43, who recently hit the cover of Glamour magazine as one of its 2025 Women of the Year, can sometimes be seen in an upcycled dress embroidered with drawings by children in Gaza as a statement of advocacy. Religion news reports Accurso remains grounded in her Christian faith while being named to New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s inaugural committee.

“Her YouTube channel … now has about 18 million subscribers and more than 13 billion views,” reports Religion News.

Meanwhile, TikTok creator Tony Vara, 24, whose family is El Salvadoran, drew nearly a million followers while broadcasting his family’s struggle with President Donald Trup’s immigration policies.

“His emotional posts in the aftermath of his mother’s deportation went viral as he documented caring for his younger siblings and navigating life without her,” reports Religion News. “On Dec. 3, a TikTok showing Vara walking through an airport with his 8-year-old brother as he prepared to send him to be with his mother in Honduras drew 6.2 million views.”

Vara also speaks of his Christian faith and how it shapes his response to grief and activism while putting a human face on one nation’s oppressive policies.

Religion News calls New York City-based Tova Sterling, 28, a “Jewish culinary creator and cultural provocateur giving the faith-sphere an influencer it didn’t know it needed.”

“With more than 300,000 followers and climbing on Instagram, she’s known for sharp, cinematic cooking videos in which she confidently wields a knife while telling bizarre stories from her life as she plates a beautiful meal. Her knife skills, humor and irreverent commentary about relationships and womanhood have kept a growing audience hungry for more.

Sterling has also built a reputation offline as the host of Sinners Shabbat, a Friday-night gathering that “mixes burlesque performance with Shabbat ritual,” according to Religion News. It also elevates Jewish comfort food and draws thousands of self-described “sinners” and the religiously curious.

Read the full Religion News report at this link.

'Pathetic loser': Trump spends his Christmas posting over 100 times to social media

On Christmas Eve 2025, President Donald Trump took to his Truth Social platform and posted: "Merry Christmas to all, including the Radical Left Scum that is doing everything possible to destroy our Country, but are failing badly. We no longer have Open Borders, Men in Women's Sports, Transgender for Everyone, or Weak Law Enforcement."

Trump continued, " What we do have is a Record Stock Market and 401K’s, Lowest Crime numbers in decades, No Inflation, and yesterday, a 4.3 GDP, two points better than expected. Tariffs have given us Trillions of Dollars in Growth and Prosperity, and the strongest National Security we have ever had. We are respected again, perhaps like never before. God Bless America!!! President DJT."

But that post was just the beginning of Trump's Christmas posting blitz. He published more than 100 posts to his Truth Social account in the early hours of Christmas morning, the Independent reported.

Trump ranted about a variety of subjects, attacked Somali immigrants and bragged about his economic policies. The president also reiterated his repeatedly debunked claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

Trump also reposted a video from deputy White House chief of staff Stephen Miller, who claimed that the president's opponents want to turn the United States into Somalia.

Miller, in the video, told viewers, "When you see the state of Somalia, that's what they want for America. Because it's easier to rule over an empire of ashes than it is for the Democratic Party to rule over a functioning, western, high-trust society with a strong middle class. That's their model for America: to make the whole country into a version of Somalia."

Trump's avalanche of Truth Social posts got a negative reaction from attorney Ari Cohn. Highlighting his posts about the 2020 election, Cohn posted, "What a pathetic loser."

Psychologists explain what may be driving Trump's use of this new 8-word catchphrase

One distinguishing trait of President Donald Trump's second term compared to his first term is his increased usage of a catchphrase that he's starting to use more often in his social media posts. And some psychologists and other experts think Trump is using it for a very specific reason.

HuffPost reported Monday that the president's pattern of including the phrase "thank you for your attention to this matter" has piqued the attention of various experts. Claire Robertson, who is an assistant professor of psychology at Maine's Colby College, remarked that the phrase is "really different than how he typically posts."

"He’s still using a lot of the kind of moral-emotional language that we know attracts attention," Robertson told HuffPost in reference to Trump's posts.

"But, 'thank you for your attention to this matter’ is not negative or moral, so it’s especially interesting,;” she continued. "It doesn’t play super nicely with some of the established findings. It’s just weirdly formal."

Holistic psychotherapist Shenikka Moore-Clarke told HuffPost that the phrase "carries undertones of control and authority," and noted that people often use language to "position themselves as the one who sets the terms of engagement." She also observed that the catchphrase can be a way of directing a reader how to feel about what someone is saying, pointing out: "It’s [subtle] but can be read as being controlling."

"It’s less about gratitude and more about command," she told HuffPost, adding "it’s a way of asserting control, implying that readers should comply or take note."

Robertson told the outlet that the catchphrase is usually not seen on his less serious posts, like memes ridiculing Democrats or promoting his son's book. Rather, she called attention to Trump using the phrase when announcing things like presidential appointments or calling on Democrats to vote for the Republican bill to reopen the federal government.

“We use linguistic cues all the time when we aren’t even realizing it,” Robertson said. "Has anyone ever pointed out that you only call your partner a specific nickname when you’re mad? This is an example of that."

Click here to read HuffPost's report in its entirety.


'Depraved': Trump's latest social media gaffe shows he is 'vulnerable to being influenced'

In President Donald Trump's most recent social media spree in which Salon's Sophia Tesfaye says he "flood[ed] the zone with chaos, and then pretend[ed] it never happened," it appears he may have been duped by "what he seemingly believed was Fox News footage."

But, alas, Salon reports, it was not Fox footage.

Trump "shared an AI-generated video promising fake alien health care technology from a conspiracy theory popular in QAnon forums," Salon explains.

The footage he shared featured an AI-generated image of himself on a fake Fox News segment touting "a new era in American healthcare" and something called a "med bed card," a fake item sold as part of a QAnon-affiliated conspiracy theory involving nonexistent medical technology. The cards supposedly provide access to "med beds," which are falsely claimed to use advanced, futuristic technology to cure any disease, regenerate limbs, and reverse aging.

That AI video, Tesfaye explains, " did not air on “My View with Lara Trump,” as it claimed, or any other Fox News show."

As for the video's well-debunked claims, investigative journalist Jacqueline Sweet discovered that the earliest mention of the video’s claim "comes from a now-deleted Instagram page that 'uses a common fake name for fake doctors in romance scams.'"

Tesfaye says that by sharing the AI footage of himself, "Trump is giving his MAGA followers false hope that he will soon grant them access to the elites’ magic product."

The Salon writer says this is "depraved and heartbreaking" because many MAGA believers have "refused medical treatment because they believe med bed tech will restore their health in minutes."

Although the president deleted the video on Sunday after huge online backlash, Trump's deep fake dupe is dangerous, Tesfaye says, and likely to continue.

"As the med bed example demonstrates, Trump is growing more vulnerable to being influenced by selective or sensational media coverage — and less likely to vet whether what he is seeing or hearing on those segments is grounded in current facts."

'Weirdly personal': Trump admin has 'very strange' response when asked about social posts

Mother Jones Senior Reporter Anna Merlan says the White House got curiously intense when she asked them to identify the person (or persons) in charge of their social media accounts.

The way the U.S. government communicates online has shifted dramatically since President Donald Trump returned to power, reports Merlan, who points out that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) didn’t used to share “a constant string of cruel and gross tweets, jokes, and memes about deporting immigrants, repelling ‘invaders,’ and thinly-veiled references to white supremacist talking points.”

Merlan said the often “overtly bigoted, xenophobic posts emanating from the current version of the U.S. government aren’t signed or attributed to anyone in particular.” Disinformation researcher Joan Donovan told Mother Jones: “They’re most effective when they’re authorless,” and described them as “classic, textbook propaganda.”

READ MORE: 'Very disrespectful!' Trump delivers late-night screed in response to 'bone spurs' hit

But when Merlan asked the White House for comment on who’s writing their posts or directing their social media strategy, it was the Department of Homeland Security that intercepted the question.

“And as I learned this week, even asking who’s writing this stuff can elicit a very strange, remarkably sloppy, and weirdly personal response,” Merlan wrote.

“Unfortunately, the American people can no longer rely on journalists like Anna Merlin [sic], who has tweeted the F-word 67 times in her illustrious career at (checks notes)… Jezebel and Mother Jones; to give them the clear unvarnished truth on the work our brave agents are doing on a daily basis,” the unknown respondent wrote. “Until Mother Jones returns to relevancy (unlikely), and becomes a neutral arbiter, DHS will continue cutting through the lies, mistruths, and half-quotes to keep Americans informed.”

And there was more, said Merlan.

READ MORE: Trump drops 'atomic bomb' on DOJ: analysis

“Calling everything you dislike ‘white supremacist propaganda’ is tiresome,” the respondent said, possibly referring to a Homeland Security ICE recruitment ad featuring a cartoon Uncle Sam studying a crossroads sign pointing the ways to “cultural decline” and “invasion,” alongside “homeland” and “opportunity.”

“… Under the Biden Administration America experienced radical social and cultural decline. Our border was flung wide open to a horde of foreign invaders and the rule of law became nonexistent, as American daughters were raped and murdered by illegal aliens,” the respondent said. “Under President Trump and Secretary Noem we are experiencing a return to the rule of law, and the American way of life.”

None of this contained a name, Merlan pointed out. She said the administration didn’t even confirm the “F-word” that appeared to irritate them so much. But she did find it “ironic that the posts’ authors are such a closely guarded secret” considering “Trump’s White House has repeatedly declared itself “the most transparent administration in history.”

Read the full Mother Jones report at this link.

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'Can you hear me now?' Trump mocked for seeking tech support on social media

President Donald Trump appeared to seek technical support in a social media post on Monday, stating that a conference call with American faith leaders had experienced difficulties, which he attributed to the telecommunications company AT&T.

He called on the company’s "boss, whoever that may be" to step in and address the issue. Trump also mentioned that his team might switch to a different carrier for future calls.

"I’m doing a major Conference Call with Faith Leaders from all over the Country, and AT&T is totally unable to make their equipment work properly. This is the second time it’s happened. If the Boss of AT&T, whoever that may be, could get involved — It would be good. There are tens of thousands of people on the line!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post Monday afternoon.

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In a subsequent post on the matter, the president said: "I apologize for the long wait on the Faith Leaders Conference Call. AT&T ought to get its act together. Please pass along the word to the tens of thousands of people who are there. We may have to reschedule the call, but we’ll use another carrier the next time. AT&T obviously doesn’t know what they’re doing!"

The president's unusual remarks complaining about tech issues led to several tongue-in-cheek responses on social media.

Journalist Max Tani wrote: "The presidential equivalent of angrily tweeting at the airline when your flight is delayed."

CNN correspondent Hadas Gold said: "Well this is one way to get service."

READ MORE: 'This man is an utter clown': Trump brutally mocked after overnight 'unhinged' Obama meltdown

"If the President can't get a conference call to work I'm not that sure it's an AT&T problem," wrote a user.

White House reporter Philip Wegmann said: "POTUS: Can you hear me now?"

The X account "Republicans against Trump" shared a screenshot of the president's post with the caption, "Totally normal and not crazy at all."

'Evil and depraved': Kristi Noem buried over 'embarrassing' social media post

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem shared a notice of the voluntary dismissal of a lawsuit against DHS on the social platform X on Thursday, captioning the post, "Suck it."

The lawsuit Espinoza Escalona v. Noem was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, where a number of immigrants alleged wrongful deportation by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) under Noem’s leadership, claiming violations of due process.

Supported by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other human rights groups, the lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed in March after defendants removed the plaintiffs from deportation proceedings.

READ MORE: There's a hidden provision in that big ugly bill that makes Trump king

Social media users reacted with surprise to the strong language in Noem's post.

Democratic influencer Harry Sisson quoted her post and wrote: "This is DHS Secretary Kristi Noem saying 'suck it' in celebration over deporting people to El Salvador without due process. She’s celebrating constitutional rights being ignored. How evil and depraved."

The Daily Beast columnist Julia Davis wrote: "Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is keeping it classy."

"Not AI. This is a real tweet from the U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security. This is our life now," wrote the account "Republicans against Trump."

READ MORE: 'Couldn't care less if he's upset': Critical number of GOP senators now oppose Trump bill

"US government officials tweeting 'Suck it' is exactly why nobody takes Kristi, or this administration as a whole, seriously. I can’t believe how far our country has fallen. We used to have decorum, class, and integrity. Now we have this," one X user tweeted.

"I support the Trump Administration and think y’all are doing a good job. But this post? Really? It’s embarrassing," wrote another in response to Noem's post.

On Wednesday, a federal judge told President Donald Trump's administration that its reported attempt to deport migrants to South Sudan clearly violated his court injunction.

U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy's order set the stage for yet another legal clash for the Trump administration, which has been frequently accused of defying the courts.

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Southern Baptist pastor suspended by his own church over secret social media accounts

A prominent Calvinist pastor, Josh Buice, who previously left the Southern Baptist Convention over what he described as its growing liberalism and “wokeness,” has now been suspended by his own church. The decision follows revelations that he allegedly operated anonymous social media accounts used to attack fellow church elders and pastors connected to a conference he organized.

Buice was the founder of the G3 Conference, which describes itself as a "content producing ministry to educate, encourage, and equip the church through resources and events for the glory of God and pastor at Pray’s Mill Baptist Church in Douglasville, Georgia."

Religion News Service reported Monday that Buice played a key role in drafting the 2018 “Statement on Social Justice,” which argued that progressive views on race — especially critical race theory — and gender roles were making inroads into evangelical circles.

READ MORE: Top Senate Republican issues Trump an ultimatum

The document reportedly emerged shortly after a major gathering of prominent evangelical figures in Memphis, held to mark the 50th anniversary of civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination and to confront ongoing racism within the church.

Buice was particularly vocal in his criticism of former Southern Baptist ethicist Russell Moore and Bible teacher Beth Moore (no relation), accusing them of advancing liberal theology. He also took aim at former SBC President Ed Litton, alleging he had plagiarized sermons.

Buice was placed on indefinite leave last week after church officials reportedly discovered conclusive proof that, over the past three years, he had managed multiple anonymous online platforms.

These included four social media accounts, two email addresses, and two Substack blogs.

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According to the church’s statement, “These accounts were used to publicly and anonymously slander numerous Christian leaders, including faithful pastors (some of whom have spoken at G3 conferences), several PMBC elders, and others.”

“Since then, Josh has acknowledged his sin, expressed sorrow, and asked for forgiveness,” according to the church’s statement. “His desire is to personally ask forgiveness of every person he has slandered or lied to.”


'Not just wrong but dangerous': How social media is warping Americans’ view of the economy

Since President Joe Biden took office, unemployment has declined and stayed low, real wages are up for low-income workers, inflation is trending downward, consumer spending remains high and disposable income per capita is steadily rising. So why are so many Americans mad about the economy?

According to a new Washington Post report, social media could be playing an outsized role in determining how Americans perceive the strength of the current economy. The Post pointed to a viral 2022 TikTok in which a customer at an Idaho McDonalds posted that he paid over $16 for a limited edition "smoky" double quarter pounder BLT with large fries and a Sprite.

"So I get that there's a labor shortage. I get that there's wage increases and a number of other things," TikToker Topher Olive said in the video, which has amassed hundreds of thousands of views. "But $16? $16 for a burger, a large fry, and a drink. It's, it's just crazy."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to hold office again?

In addition to Topher Olive's TikTok, the platform is full of viral content in which creators incorrectly assert that America is in the midst of a "silent depression." Another viral TikTok falsely claims that Americans have "the lowest purchasing power we have ever had in American history." The Post highlighted another post in which a creator wrongly stated that "we currently are making less than at the height of the Great Depression." The prevalence of viral content souring Americans on the economy now puts Biden administration between a rock and a hard place, as it has to walk a fine line between touting its on-paper economic accomplishments while not dismissing the concerns of struggling working-class Americans.

"I’m aware of that," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on CNBC when asked about young voters' economic concerns. "I think it’s our job to explain to Americans what President Biden has done to improve the economy."

Of course, rosy economic data doesn't paint the entire picture of an economy in which millions of workers are still struggling. Stubbornly high interest rates have made homeownership a pipe dream for those who aren't already wealthy, with home sales hitting a 30-year low. With home sales down, more Americans are renting, straining available rental housing inventory with the resulting demand driving up the cost of rent. Many grocery items are still costlier than usual, even as costs for other items, like eggs, have gone down. Social media content creator Jordan Uhl told the Post that because the majority of TikTok's user base is comprised of younger Americans who work hourly jobs, it makes sense they gravitate toward content that's more reflective of their own economic reality.

"There’s this cadre of number-crunching paperwork obsessives who are convinced that if some report says inflation is slowing, that means everything is great and everybody who feels something different is either lying or brainwashed by TikTok," Uhl said. "The idea that people are just making this up or are misled about their own material conditions is absurd."

READ MORE: Americans are tiptoeing out of economic turmoil this holiday shopping season


The future of mind control: How social media is supercharging the propaganda system

In their book Manufacturing Consent, the late Ed Herman and professor Noam Chomsky described how a privately owned free press could function as a propaganda system that deceived its readers quite as efficiently as a heavy-handed government censor.

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That time Democrats secretly used Russian social media tactics

Remember those dubious Twitter and Facebook tactics the Russians reportedly employed to influence the United States’ 2016 election? You know, the ones that Democrats have been railing against for a couple of years. Turns out that the Democratic Party may be furious about their possible impact on American democracy, but isn’t above using them.

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