President Donald Trump on Sunday shared an AI video of Democratic congressmen jailed for their video asking service members to defy “unlawful orders.”

Sens. Elissa Slotkin (Mich.), Mark Kelly (Ariz.) and other U.S. lawmakers with military and intelligence experience received full-blown wrath from Trump, who had said they were traitors whose behavior should be punished by death. The president even promoted a publication on hanging as a means. He later said they should be in jail.

So, for a moment, the president was able to grant a wish through a fake clip showing bars materializing around the video’s six contributors. Some even receive prison stripes. (On Monday, the Pentagon announced that it was investigating Kelly for an alleged violation of military law.)

In the Truth Social AI dump that reinforced his anger over Sunday’s video, Trump also took aim at entries that featured Guy Fawkes, an English explosives expert who once plotted unsuccessfully to blow up Parliament and kill the king in the early 17th century. It was later popularized as a mask representing rebellion in the film “V for Vendetta.”

The issue has arisen amid Trump’s legally disputed raids on blue cities and deadly attacks on suspected drug traffickers at sea.

On Sunday, the president also submitted entries depicting him as larger than life. In one image, he is a caped hero with an American flag presumably warning the military to “remember your oath.”

In another, in which the president appears illuminated by lightning, the publication resorts to an old far-right theme: “It is time to destroy the deep state.”

The president, who also seemed preoccupied with football on Sunday, found time to share another Guy Fawkes-themed post. The title says: “Nothing can stop what is coming!”

Expect a lot more from Trump fakes and AI. Any outlet that can portray him practically shitting on protesters like an airline pilot in a crown has probably found a permanent devotee in the president.

Trump's AI attacks are likely to continue.
Trump’s AI attacks are likely to continue.

Andrew Harnik via Getty Images