Trump set up a hotline to find out about criminal aliens. Trolls pounced on him instead
When US President Donald Trump announced his hotline for victims of immigration crimes to a joint session of Congress, he got loud boos and groans from the assembled elected officials, worried about painting immigrants broadly as violent criminals.
But watching from home, Alexander McCoy saw an opportunity for a monumental Twitter prank and a subtle act of civil disobedience. It was based, he said, on his seething anger at how Trump thinks of immigrants - and a pun.
If the president wanted Americans to call the VOICE hotline to talk about aliens behaving badly, McCoy thought, well, that’s what Americans should do.
McCoy, a Marine Corps veteran, wrote a tweet on April 26, which, not so coincidentally, was #AlienDay on Twitter, a tie-in with an upcoming movie:
“Wouldn’t it be a shame if millions of people called this hotline to report their encounters with aliens of the UFO-variety.”
The internet got the joke and launched a thousand memes. Then, people started trolling the hotline with reports of aliens in action.