An honest man may or may not still work in the West Wing.

On Wednesday, a twitter account was briefly active before being shut down. The tweeter, @WhiteHouseLeak, is an anonymous mid-level staffer in the West Wing of the White House, who described a chaotic atmosphere, a demoralized staff, and an unfocused and irrational President incapable of processing information. The staffer is a Republican who apparently worked on the Trump campaign, but is now thoroughly disillusioned by what has been going on. During his brief presence he was tweeting to real reporters, including Fox News and the New York Daily News.

It is impossible to know if the leaker shuttered the account himself or was outed. The tweets have all been deleted, but thanks to screencaps by MC Rantz Hoseley (@MysteryCr8tve) and an imgur by vapensiero they were preserved before vanishing. The presentation here is, I believe, in strict chronological order. I have omitted a few irrelevancies, but most of the 37 total tweets from the account are shown below.

The thread referred to here, from NYT reporter Maggie Haberman, is very likely the one I will recap below.

The Maggie Haberman thread, which @WhiteHouseLeak described as “correct” and “completely solid” is below:

x ... started calling advisers and aides angry about the @BCAppelbaum RT by parks, accusing media of being out to get him. Trump's worst 2/ — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 25, 2017

x ...to let go of any grievance or perceived slight. And he is genuinely transfixed by people thinking his election isn't legit. He is 4/ — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 25, 2017

x ...has historically been the one who most undercuts himself. He is also driven by desire to be treated seriously/with respect. For the WH 6/ — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 25, 2017

x ...tend to adopt his mindset about how he is treated. Not all aides thought Spicer jeremiad was a bad idea. But all shared view POTUS 8/ — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 25, 2017

x ...was being treated poorly. by press. None could get him to move past the feeling of injury, to focus on the enormity at hand. 9/9 — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 25, 2017

Portrait of a man on the edge. Of what, we do not yet know.