Thai Cops in Drag? AI Prank Exposes Media's Reality Check Deficit Disorder
Woke Thai police AI stunt reveals journos are too busy virtue signaling to do their damn jobs.

So, some woke Thai police department thought it would be hilarious to drop an AI-generated image of its officers in drag. Turns out, the 'journalists' at the Daily Star, Telegraph, Sun, and even the NY Post were too busy retweeting to bother, you know, actually checking if it was real. This isn't news, it's a clown show.
Apparently, the geniuses running the Tha Luang police station's Facebook page thought a little AI cross-dressing would make them look 'friendlier.' Newsflash: if you need AI to make you look approachable, you're probably doing something wrong. But hey, at least they provided some much-needed comic relief for those of us who haven't completely lost our sense of humor in the face of the apocalypse.
Let's be real, the media's supposed to be the gatekeepers of truth, but they're too busy pushing narratives and virtue signaling to do their damn jobs. This whole thing reads like a Babylon Bee skit, but it's real life. We're living in a world where an AI-generated image of Thai cops in drag makes it to the front page of major newspapers because nobody bothers to fact-check anymore. Seriously, did no one think to, like, call the Thai police station?
This isn't just about a silly image. It's about the complete and utter collapse of journalistic standards. These 'reporters' are so desperate to fill their quotas and get those sweet, sweet clicks that they'll publish anything, no questions asked. And then they wonder why nobody trusts them anymore.
The real image, which the police station eventually shared, showed the five officers in their regular uniforms. No dresses, no sequins, no woke agenda. Just regular cops doing regular cop things. But hey, that's not nearly as exciting as the AI-generated fever dream, right?
The media's response has been predictable. They're blaming AI, saying it's too hard to verify images. Translation: 'We're lazy and incompetent, and it's easier to blame technology than to admit we screwed up.' Newsflash: there are ways to verify images, even AI-generated ones. It just requires a little effort, which is apparently too much to ask.
This whole debacle is a perfect illustration of why the legacy media is dying. They're out of touch, they're biased, and they're completely incapable of doing their jobs. It's time to build something new, something that actually values truth and integrity.

