How does Trump get away with threatening nuclear war on Twitter?

President Donald Trump. CNN photo.

The president of the United States made another threat of nuclear war on Twitter, but the company doesn't seem to think the post breaks any of its rules.

Donald Trump boasted on Twitter about how his nuclear button was bigger than North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's, and people are calling for the president to be banned from the platform.

On Tuesday, Trump tweeted a fully loaded response to the North Korean leader, who mentioned in his annual address a nuclear button on his desk, capable of hitting the United States.

"This is reality, not a threat," Kim Jong Un said.

Trump responded, "I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!"

Twitter users are asking the platform whether this violates its policy against violent threats. 

But in an automated response to several people reporting the tweet, Twitter says Trump's message represents "no violation of the Twitter Rules against abusive behavior."

Twitter confirmed to Mashable that "this Tweet did not violate our terms of service," referencing the Twitter Rules against violent threats and glorification of violence.

"You may not make specific threats of violence or wish for the serious physical harm, death, or disease of an individual or group of people," the rules state.

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"Please note that wishing or hoping that someone experiences serious physical harm, making vague threats, or threatening less serious forms of physical harm would not fall under this specific policy. Instead, we may review and take action against that content under our abusive behavior and hateful conduct policies."

CNN's Brian Stelter, who said during a broadcast that he asked Twitter officials if Trump's tweet might violate the platform's terms of service, was directly lambasted by Trump's director of social media, Dan Scavino Jr.

Why doesn't Twitter ban Trump? In September, the social platform said that it takes into account "newsworthiness" when deciding whether or not a tweet violates the company's conduct policy.

Twitter's spokesperson issued this statement after Trump tweeted an earlier threat against North Korea. The North Korean government claimed the tweet was a "clear declaration of war." 

Copyright The Gayly – January 3, 2018 @ 10:30 a.m. CST.