Donald Trump returned to the strange, nonpartisan conspiracy world this week as his social account of truth shared a video that promotes the imaginary technology that conspiracy theory advertises as “medbed.”
Followers of the “Medbed” conspiracy believe that the US government has long kept the technology away from the American people and uses it only on military and politician members.
Beds do not exist – followers imagine devices straight from video games that can be used to heal wounds, regrow the limbs, or stiffen the disease, and other techniques that even fantasy writers find fantasy.
However, on Saturday, the president's social account of the truth posted a video that appears to support the plot. The video itself, the creation of the AI, had been removed from the card bait by Sunday morning. Among them, the president's daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, has pinned a fake Fox News segment that promotes the new Trump administration health plan that will lead to “Medbed Hospital” and “National Medbed Cards.”[s] For all citizens. ”
“Every American will receive their own Medbed card right away,” said Trump, an AI-generated player, in the video, who has his voice fallen and spins the robot. “So you'll have access to our new hospital, led by top doctors in the country.”
There are some indications that you will be offering the video as a clear fake. The low-resolution quality of the clip, the eerie sense of the valley radiated by the voice of Trump, and the false font used in Fox News Chyron. However, the overall quality of AI Deepfark was clearly of sufficient quality to deceive the President of the United States, or anyone who made the post out of his true social account.
It raises the question of whether the president has determined that he can believe the video if Trump himself shares it.
Independence We contacted the White House for comment.
As of Sunday afternoon, there were no statements from the White House or the president's social media channels.
“The so-called alternative medicine practitioners often argue that their pseudo-scientific treatment is useful in almost anything, but they have stopped even in affirming limb regeneration. But they can do nothing.
“Inexplicably, [believers in med beds] It embraces the notion that all these healing medbeds are currently in military possessions. A kind of alliance between not only the US military, but all the troops in the world, sadly, like the end of the film's independence day, they all work together and are all friends and working together, and the war is a thing of the past,” Jarry added in a blog post in August. We all go to the military base, lie down in one of these beds and receive a promise to be healed from everything. The best part is that it's free. ”
Also on Saturday, the president used his true social account to amplify misinformation about the deployment of FBI agents on January 6, 2021.
His supporters were riled by a report from right-wing reporter John Solomon, hinting that hundreds of FBI agents had been deployed to the crowds on January 6th.
FBI Director Kash Patel was forced to make it clear that those agents were deployed in response to violence. He tried to argue in a Saturday interview with FOX News that the U.S. Capitol development, which saw the insufficiently falling out of FBI agents, is a scandal.
“After the riots were declared by Metro Police, the agents were sent to a crowd control mission, which is contrary to FBI standards,” Patel told Fox News. “This was a corrupt leadership failure that lied to Congress and the American people about what actually happened.”
