#GovDocs2Trump Tweetathon and End of Term Harvest

This came to me through library channels and may have originated from @noftalee. The idea is to tweet Trump some of the documents that tell the story of our country.

The Tweetathon announcement says:

#GovDocs2Trump Tweetathon

America deserves a president who is well versed in the history of this nation and the documents upon which that history was built. Let’s present those documents to the President-Elect through his favorite medium–Twitter.

Tweetathon will begin at 9am (central) on December 1, 2016. You are welcome to join at any time.

Feel free to use whatever government related document (Supreme Court decisions, innagurial addresses, speeches, early American papers, etc.) strikes your fancy.

Tag each tweet with the hashtag #GovDocs2Trump and please send them to @realdonaldtrump. This way we can fill his feed.

Finally, please make your first tweet “Dear @realDonaldTrump, We the people demand an informed President.

So yes, of course I plan to join the Tweetathon. In fact, I started making a list of documents I will send. These include the CONAN, The US Constitution Annotated , the Nixon grand jury records and many more

For those who would like to join the conversation but need suggestions on where to find government documents, here are some suggestions:

Our Documents has a list of 100 millstones documents from American history such as the Emancipation Proclamation. A much larger collection is available from Govinfo and Government Publishing Office’s database. Browse their index for Executive orders, Presidential papers and more.

Are your interests in history, diplomacy, foreign affairs? Try FRUS Foreign relations of the United States. There you will find all the correspondences, cables, letters, etc. between presidents and other official. The collection is arranged by president and by topic. For example John F Kennedy Kennedy-Khrushchev Exchanges, Volume VI (it’s basically a retrospective edited wikileaks)

For those that are more into numbers, there are reports from the Census Bureau on topic such as poverty as well as infographics

And the Double Feature? The start of the Tweetathon happens to coincide with the End of Term Harvest event I am facilitating tomorrow at the New York Academy of Medicine

Grey Literature End of Term Harvest. 10-1pm, The New York Academy of Medicine, 1216 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street, New York, NY 10029.

The change of government administration brings the potential to eliminate websites, remove information and limit access to past administration content. This day we will identify such websites, particularly in areas on the Affordable Care Act, climate change and more, focusing on government social media and information not on .gov domains.

The plan is to double dip. Not matter where you are #GovDocs2Trump.

[Editor’s note: republished with the permission of the author from her blog Debbie Rabina, Ph.D. Professor, Pratt Institute, School of Information]

Posted in: Education, Government Resources, Information Management, Internet Resources - Web Links, Leadership, Legal Research, United States Law