President Donald Trump has posted an AI video showing that he is promoting the true socially to his 10.8 million followers of a fake product called “Medbeth.”
The clip says that the president's daughter, Lala Trump, will announce “the country's first Medbed hospital,” and that all Americans will receive a “Medbed card.”

The report will then be reduced to AI Trump speaking in direct, complete text that contradicts the president's usual speech patterns.
“Every American will receive their own Medbed card right away,” says AI Trump. “It guarantees access to new hospitals led by top doctors across the country, with the world's most advanced technology.”
“Medbeds” is a conspiracy that spreads widely across far-right canon circles. The idea is that while the US government has access to future health pods where it can treat any illness and even regenerate its limbs, liberals are hiding this information from the American people. One sect of Qanon believes that the government is using Medbed to keep JFK alive.
Other conspiracy theorists believe Donald Trump knows the technology. In 2021, Telegram canon followers created a headline to write an open letter in which he asked then-Citizen Trump to release Medbed to help heal his sick wife, suffering from an autoimmune disease.
It is unclear where the clip came from and why the president posted it. It was shared midway through a late-night post where Trump shares multiple clips from the right-wing network.
The Daily Beast contacted the White House for comment.

Some companies have stopped selling the sci-fi pods that Medbedo followers envision, but have tried to capitalize on Medbedo's plot by promoting themselves as Medbedodd's adjunct. For example, Tesla Biohealing sells the “Medbed Generator,” a metal canister that patients place under their actual beds, for $11,000.
Speaking to the Daily Beast in 2022, Tesla's Biohealing CEO James Liu claimed that the company didn't want to be associated with the Medbed hoax, but promised that the product would deliver “life force energy” to people with illnesses.
In 2024, Tesla's biohealing client filed a Maude adverse event report with the FDA, claiming that the company's Medbed Generator did nothing to heal his dying mother, and that the company removed negative reviews of the product from their website.
