You need to know
- Taking it to social media, President Donald Trump shared, and then deleted his own AI-generated video that promotes Medbed conspiracy theory
- This theory suggests that Medbeds, a nonexistent medical technology that cannot cure any kind of medical illness, exists, but is only used by rich and famous people.
- In the generated video, the president promised that all Americans would receive “medbed cards of their own”
President Donald Trump reportedly shared a fake video of himself pledging access to new medical technologies that do not exist over the weekend.
On Saturday, September 27th, 79-year-old Trump posted a fake news clip generated using artificial intelligence. Forbescnn and Daily Beast.
The clip, discussed and shared by CNN's Jake Tapper on Instagram, featured an AI-generated Fox News segment hosted by the president's stepdaughter, Lara Trump. It emphasized a “historical new healthcare system” that is deeply rooted in conspiracy theory.
“Every American will receive their own Medbed card right away,” the president's AI-generated version states in the video. “It guarantees access to new hospitals led by top doctors across the country, with the world's most advanced technology.”
Scott Tesch/PGA in America via Getty
“These facilities are safe and modern and designed to restore all citizens to full health and strength,” he added in a clip generated by the AI.
“Medbed Hospitals: The New Era in Healthcare,” a message written at the start of the Fake Fox News report states.
Andrew Harnik/Getty
Fox News has been confirmed Barge The segment “did not air on the Fox News Channel or other Fox News Media Platforms.”
The clip was then removed from Trump's truth social account. According to him, it was about 12 hours before he disappeared from his profile. Daily Beast.
The White House and Fox news did not respond immediately when people contacted them for comments.
“Medved” conspiracy theory has grown in recent years, with each CNN, among the Canon movement.
Andrew Leyden/Zuma Press Wire/Shutterstock
According to the BBC, Medbed (short for “medical bed” or “meditation bed” — is dubbed online as a secret miracle device that can cure almost any illness, but is purposefully protected from public vision by billionaires and “deep states.” However, there is no real evidence that the bed exists.
“Medbeds is a popular conspiracy theory among the Qanon people, and these magic beds exist. These magic beds recover the limbs, reverse aging, and cure what falls on the human body, but are only available to the rich and elite,” Tapper told Instagram.
According to CNN, some versions of Medbeds are advertised and sold online between New Age and Holistic Circles, but “vendors often make suspicious and unproven promises about the items on sale,” the outlet claims.
You won't miss the story. Sign up for people's free daily newsletters and stay up to date with what people have to offer, from celebrity news to stories of fascinating human interests.
The BBC reported that some people believe that medical technology is kept secret and hidden from the public due to billionaires and “deep states.” Other conspiracy theorists believe that “alien technology” plays part in Medbed's theory, but some strange claims suggest that former President John F. Kennedy is tied to Mebble, the outlet said.
JFK was the 35th president of the United States and served from 1961 until 1963 at the age of 46.
