Out of all the US military guys i know you are the dumbest of all , you definitely has no knowledge of how military patches and names tags supposed to be, freaking nurse 🤣🤣🤣🤣
At Trojan Beast, we have analyzed the AI-generated image from the X post and identified our
9 points to prove it’s fake, based on the fabricated "General" allegedly created by Ibos/IPOB, November 06, 2025. Here are the points for everyone to know:
1. The Wall Portrait in Trump’s Oval Office is Thomas Jefferson vs. Not Thomas; the US Flag is on the Left Not Right.
2. The Flag is Different from the Original Flag; Check EvidenceAnalysis: The U.S. flag in the image seems off. The current U.S. flag (since July 4, 1960) has 50 stars and 13 stripes.
3. The World Map Has Many Errors; Even You Can’t Locate England or Europe Analysis: The map in the image is a focal point of the satire, with the post joking about the hand pointing to Ado Ekiti instead of Borno or Plateau. Cartographic errors are common in AI-generated content, as noted in Cartography
4. Closeness of Board Meeting the Chair, Plus the Blurry . The image shows a close-up of a briefing board with a chair nearby, but the composition is cluttered and blurry, a common AI generation flaw.
5. Trump’s Oval Office Has a Gold Curtain; the Curtain is Totally Different from the Oval Curtain; Check Pics for Details
narrative of an alternate reality where U.S. and Nigerian elements are comically blended.
6. No Brigadier General Keeps Beards; All Shaved Clean
Analysis: U.S. Army regulations (Army Regulation 670–1) mandate clean-shaven faces for soldiers, with exceptions only for medical or religious reasons (e.g., beards under TB Med 287 must be trimmed to 1/4 inch). The “General” in the image has a beard, which is inconsistent with standard U.S. military grooming policies for a Brigadier General.
The Name Cocotee Does Not Exist; (b) The Name is on the Wrong Side; Names Go on the Right Not Left; the Specialist and Patches Pins Are BlurryAnalysis: The name “Cocotee” on the uniform is fictitious, as no such name appears in U.S. military records. Additionally, U.S. Army uniforms typically display name tapes on the right chest and rank/service tapes on the left (Uniforms of the United States Air Force - Wikipedia and Army Regulation 670–1). The reversal here is another AI error or satirical twist. The blurry specialist badges and patches further suggest poor generation quality, a point fact-checkers likely flagged in the trend, reinforcing the image’s inauthenticity.
8. U.S. Army Is Always on the Left Not the RightAnalysis: In U.S. military imagery, the Army insignia or flag is conventionally on the left shoulder or side of the uniform, with the U.S. flag on the right shoulder (reversed for forward motion, per Flag of the United States - Wikipedia). The image’s placement of Army elements on the right side is incorrect, another clue of manipulation. This could be a deliberate choice by the creators to highlight the absurdity of the scenario, aligning with Nigerian netizens’ playful critique.
9. The OCP and the General Star Are Different. Analysis: The Operational Camouflage Pattern (OCP) uniform, standard since 2015 for the U.S. Army, should feature a single star for a Brigadier General on the shoulder boards (Uniforms of the United States Air Force - Wikipedia and Army Regulation 670–1). The image’s OCP appears altered, and the star insignia seems inconsistent—possibly missing or misaligned. This discrepancy, combined with the blurry patches, points to AI generation flaws, supporting the trend’s confirmation of the image as fake.
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Baby terrorists, your eye will pill soon.