The former president’s social media output has long been a source of fascination and alarm. Now, according to sources within British intelligence, it is being treated as a potential vector for disinformation that could destabilise allied nations. The analysis, reportedly conducted by GCHQ and MI6, suggests that Trump’s posts are not merely erratic but are being weaponised by foreign actors who amplify and distort his messages to sow discord.
For the average citizen, this may seem distant. But the cultural shift is palpable: trust in information itself has become a casualty. On the street, people express weariness.
‘I don’t know what to believe anymore,’ said a commuter in Manchester. ‘It’s like the truth got lost somewhere.’ The human cost is anxiety and fragmentation.
Allies, from Berlin to Canberra, are bracing for a wave of manipulated narratives. This is not about one man’s tweets. It is about how power flows through digital spaces and disconnects us from shared reality.
The observation deck of society is crowded, and the view is troubling.












