President Obama took to Twitter on Wednesday afternoon and posted a series of six tweets reaffirming his position that the U.S. can respond to the Syrian refugee crisis while protecting American national security against ISIS. The tweets were sent from Obama’s @POTUS account and given the president’s high-profile social media presence, the posts quickly garnered a flood of attention. Within three hours, the half dozen tweets had gotten more than 38,900 retweets and 58,250 hearts — and that was just on Twitter.
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The White House also posted POTUS’ comments on Facebook, adding “#refugeeswelcome,” a hashtag first used in September after an image of drowned 3-year-old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi went viral. The White House brought back the hashtag to launch its “Welcoming Syrian Refugees” digital campaign Tuesday, which aims to counter the concerns that have been expressed this week by Republican presidential candidates, as well as several U.S. governors and members of Congress, that refugees present national security threats to the United States.
Tens of thousands of Americans so far have engaged with Obama’s tweets and Facebook post — and that doesn’t even factor in the millions reached worldwide. The use of the hashtag helped garner some extra attention, particularly as influential figures, like former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, have been using the hashtag while being featured in White House posts online.









