Anybody who knows that Donald Trump is president of the United States probably knows that his Twitter feed is his mouthpiece to the world. He criticizes global leaders, threatens war, berates the media, and, well, you name it. It's no understatement to suggest that the nation's 45th chief executive has assumed the Twitter Presidency.

Now there is a movement afoot to silence the @realdDonaldTrump handle, which has 36.6 million followers and has tweeted more than 35,000 times. Despite allegations that Trump is breaching Twitter's terms of service for using the service to threaten violence, Twitter isn't about to kick off its most high-profile tweeter.

So a former CIA undercover operative is trying to do what Twitter won't: end the Twitter Presidency. Although her plan will most likely never come to fruition, Valerie Plame Wilson has started a GoFundMe page to raise $1 billion, which would make her Twitter's largest shareholder and give her great monetary influence over Twitter's policies.

"Donald Trump has done a lot of horrible things on Twitter. From emboldening white supremacists to promoting violence against journalists, his tweets damage the country and put people in harm's way," Plame Wilson wrote on her GoFundMe page. "But threatening actual nuclear war with North Korea takes it to a dangerous new level."

The White House countered, saying that Trump has a constitutional right to use Twitter.

"Her ridiculous attempt to shut down his First Amendment is the only clear violation and expression of hate and intolerance in this equation," Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said.

Plame Wilson's undercover status was leaked during the George W. Bush administration to discredit her husband, Joe Wilson, and she eventually resigned. Her husband had published an op-ed in The New York Times discrediting Bush's public statements that Iraq's leader, Saddam Hussein, sought significant quantities of uranium yellowcake from Africa. Joe Wilson was the former chief of mission at the US Embassy in Iraq and had previously investigated the uranium allegations at the behest of the CIA.

Plame Wilson says on the GoFundMe page that "It's time to shut him down. The bad news is Twitter has ignored growing calls to enforce their own community standards and delete Trump's account. The good news is we can make that decision for them."

The former operative has a long way to go to reach her $1 billion goal for a stake in the company worth about $12 billion. As of this writing, Plame Wilson has raised about $10,000.