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ago by Prodigy (9.9k points)
edited ago by
Vatican fires back at Trump with a picture of the pope dressed as president.

2 Answers

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ago by Apprentice (1.6k points)
selected ago by
 
Best answer

This claim is false. The context of this Bluesky post relates to a recent controversial post of an A.I. generated photo featuring President Trump dressed as the Pope. Originally coming from President Trump's Truth Social X account, the image was later reposted by the White House's official X account, sparking the ire of many Catholics who, in preparing to select a new Pope, were still mourning the death of Pope Francis according to interviews and social media posts collected by the National Public Radio. 

Catholic leaders criticize Trump for posting apparent AI photo of himself as the pope : NPR (NPR)

The Bluesky post in question claims that the Vatican then posted an A.I. generated photo of the new pope, Pope Leo XIV, dressed as the president in an act of retribution, although this is not true. The Bluesky post is ambiguous, but by claiming that this photo of Pope LEO XIV dressed as the president came from the "Vatican," I assume the Bluesky user means that it came from an official social media account affiliated with the Papacy. A little research told me that the Church does indeed have official social media accounts, and that Pope Leo XIV has proclaimed that he will be posting from them actively (The Independent collected this information from the Vatican's communications office).

Pope Leo XIV returns to social media with a message of peace (The Independent)

In fact, the most recent news article on the subject (published 50 minutes prior to the writing of this analysis) included a report of the new pope's first social media post: a short and peaceful greeting. 

Pope Leo XIV publishes first post on papal social media accounts - Vatican News (Vatican News)

This report came from the Vatican News, the official news outlet of the Holy See. Needless to say, this news outlet is trustworthy as it relates to concrete happenings within the Papacy. 

About us - Vatican News

I went and looked up the post to see for myself on Instagram, not because I did not believe it had really been posted but because I wanted to see the timestamp on the post. At the time of writing this fact-check, the post is eight hours old. 

Instagram

Therefore, it is impossible that any official "Vatican" social media account actually posted the A.I. generated picture of Pope Leo XIV; the timestamp of the Bluesky post that claims so is from May 11th, two full days before the Pope's first social media post since ascension on May 13th. 

I also could not find any news articles about this A.I. generated image, and because this would likely warrant much online discussion given that the original post by President Trump became quickly embroiled in criticism and controversy, I assume that the post in question is not real, or at the very least that it originated from an account unaffiliated with the Papacy. 

Finally, I looked into the Bluesky account that claimed the Vatican had posted this image of Pope Leo XIV dressed as the president, and they do not appear to be a trustworthy source. Firstly, their previous posts are mostly anti-President Trump political cartoons (which provides a clear motive for making this false claim as their own way to "fire back" at the President's original post) and random quotes and statistics presented as facts but without proper citations and laced with unprofessional language, such as a description of President Trump which reads, "our senile, diapered, nincompoop." Taken together, this account has no credentials for posting trustworthy information and seems dedicated to the pursuit of insulting President Trump and spreading other media that opposes him, whether or not said media holds any validity. 

@papa2doc.bsky.social — Bluesky

Between the impossible timelines of this post's claim/the reports of Pope Leo XIV's first social media activity and the lack of news reporting about the A.I. image (not to mention the Bluesky user's non-trustworthy account), this claim can be ruled as false. 

False
ago by Journeyman (2.0k points)
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I really appreciate how in-depth into this fact check you went! Your analysis covering the several social media platforms and what was posted it really helps the audience understand the depth of this subject and your understanding. You did a really good job with linking all of your supporting sources so its easy for us to navigate to, great job!
ago by Newbie (320 points)
0 0
This is a really good factcheck, especially the timeline analysis comparing the Pope's first verified social media post to the date of the Bluesky claim. When you mention that the post is “impossible” due to the timeline, it might help to qualify that with a phrase like “barring a deleted or unpublished post”.
ago by Apprentice (1.3k points)
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The way you presented a timeline of information on various platforms showcases a very in depth understanding within your response. The backtracking and connection to other sources makes your response very easy to navigate and then determine.
1 like 0 dislike
ago by Novice (630 points)

This claim was made by a user on the BlueSky social media platform. It is a post referencing the AI photo posted by US President Donald Trump as the new pope. This post contains the claim "Vatican fires back at Trump with a picture of the pope dressed as president," followed by an AI generated image of the newly elected pope as the US president. 

Looking at the validity of this claim, the user who made the post has no other information regarding the images originality, or political affiliation. Therefore, we can confirm the source as unreliable, as anyone can go on BlueSky, and post anything they want. 

As I started to do my own research, I could not find anything regarding the Vatican firing back at Donald Trump. I also investigated the Vatican News instagram account that is most closely correlated with the church, and was unable to find anything regarding this topic or image. In essence, the claim is false.

https://www.instagram.com/vaticannews/?hl=en

False
ago by Novice (720 points)
0 0
I appreciate your order of investigation, starting with understanding the claim and referenced image. As it was made by a BlueSky user, it is also helpful to understand their background if any is available. Finalizing with direct searching for articles and official Vatican outlets solidifies your answer for it being false!

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