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by Vadim Zagorenko June 01, 2026 from RT Website
of state-sponsored s**tposting, where culture wars are no longer won by tanks, speeches, or movie studios...
Culture wars will never be the same again...
However, its creators openly admit that they collaborated closely
with the US Air Force, essentially producing propaganda content.
It's also common for well-known musicians and comedians to perform
on military bases.
For the first time ever, official government agencies have started speaking not just in populist rhetoric but in memes.
And suddenly, one of the most populist governments in the world found itself losing the cultural battle to one of the world's most conservative and unpopular regimes.
The first
shift occurred after the ceasefire between Iran and Israel, when
Trump posted a video featuring American bombers set to the song
'Bomb Iran'...
Source: Social media
Shortly after the first American strikes against Iran in March, the
official White House account on X shared a video of bombings set to
a remix of Lynyrd Skynyrd's 'Free Bird'.
The
juxtaposition of pop music with jokes accompanying footage of
missile strikes might generate shock value for niche bloggers, but
not official government accounts.
These posts were written in
English and targeted an international audience.
To achieve the first goal, Iran highlighted the darkest consequences
of the conflict, particularly focusing on the tragic deaths of
Iranian schoolgirls due to a US missile strike in Minab...
This makes it
easier to share the post without the risk of scaring people away
with graphic content. Even those who mock AI slop end up boosting
its reach.
For instance, when Trump demanded that the Strait of Hormuz
be opened and warned of escalating the conflict, Iran fired back
using a popular template from the anime 'Tomorrow's Joe'...
Even in the face of
significant losses, it maintained a winner's rhetoric, emphasizing
the issues faced by the American government and military.
However, government memes alone weren't enough - embassies and other official entities still had to maintain a 'professional' tone, and by default, the public saw them as serving the interests of politicians.
To address this, Iranian propaganda began to collaborate with a formally 'independent' group called Explosive Media.
Source: Social media
Source: Social media
The group chose the Lego format for a reason.
Also, it
allows the group to publish content on any platform without being
blocked for graphic content.
Source: Social media
Iranians use generative AI primarily to mock Americans, not to pass off parodies as truth.
The only significant misinformation campaigns involving deepfakes were attempts to convince the world that Netanyahu was dead, and the footage of explosions in Iran.
The
latter circulated mostly in Indian social media circles, contained
mixed messages, and may have been spread by the US or a third party.
Source: Social media
Both Trump's opponents in the US and the Iranian authorities criticize,
Moreover, because memes circulate anonymously and are frequently
modified, even those initially created by the government can come
across as the work of ordinary people.
Internet Punk
is Dead
As a result, any irreverent joke can end up
becoming part of a government information campaign...
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