Donald Trump is back on his Obama fixation, and this time he ran with a doctored Obama image that he posted to his Truth Social account on Sunday, July 5. The picture shows Barack and Michelle Obama smiling and waving from the top of a staircase next to a baby blue and white presidential plane that has been spray painted top to bottom with graffiti. The words splashed across the aircraft read Yes We Can, the slogan that carried Barack Obama into the White House in 2008, along with BLM for Black Lives Matter, the name Obama in bold red letters, and a line of Arabic text. That Arabic phrase translates to alhamdulillah, which means praise be to God or thank God. None of it is real, and Trump offered no words to go with it.
He did not need any. The doctored Obama image travels on its own, and the graffiti styling is doing most of the talking. Dressing a plane up in that particular visual language leans on a tired shorthand that ties Black neighborhoods to crime and decay, the kind of coded imagery that has shown up in racist messaging for decades. Layering it onto Barack and Michelle Obama, the first Black family to live in the White House, is the entire point. The Arabic text pulls double duty, nodding back to the false birther conspiracy Trump spent years pushing, the lie that Obama was secretly foreign and secretly Muslim. Put together, every element of the picture is a callback to an old smear, repackaged for a Sunday scroll.

The plane itself is not a random prop either. Trump recently took his first flight on a brand new Air Force One, a retrofitted Boeing 747 valued at roughly 400 million dollars and gifted to the United States by Qatar. He scrapped the aircraft’s signature light blue hull, the shade designed to help it blend into the sky, and repainted it with a navy belly and red and gold stripes to match his own taste. So building a doctored Obama image around a graffiti covered jet reads as personal on more than one level. It mocks the Obamas while quietly pulling attention back to the plane Trump just made his own. The timing lands during a stretch when he has been leaning hard into imagery, spectacle, and posts engineered to swallow a full news cycle.
This is not a one off. The doctored Obama image slots neatly into a pattern Trump has run for months. In February, during the very first week of Black History Month, he posted an image depicting the Obamas as primates. That one got pulled down after backlash from civil rights leaders and even members of his own party, and a staffer eventually took the blame while Trump himself refused to apologize. Then last month he shared a manipulated photo of the new Obama presidential library going up in Chicago, doctored to make the building look like it was topped with a bag of garbage and surrounded by wasteland. He tagged that one with a jab about the library becoming a Mecca for people who hate America. The through line is impossible to miss, and it always circles back to the same family.
The post did not stay contained either. Within hours it was ricocheting across timelines, screenshotted and reshared by people condemning it and people cheering it in equal measure, which is exactly how these things are built to work. Outrage and amplification feed the same machine. The Associated Press and CBC both placed the doctored Obama image inside Trump’s long record of aiming incendiary and at times racist rhetoric at the Obamas, from the birther lie to blunt generalizations about majority Black countries. None of that history is subtle, and neither is this. A fake photo of a graffiti covered plane is not a policy statement or a joke that missed. It is a message, and the people it targets read it instantly.
What makes the whole thing land louder is the silence on the other side. The White House has not responded to requests for comment, and a spokeswoman for the Obamas has said nothing. That fits how Barack and Michelle Obama have handled Trump for years, declining to take the bait and letting his posts speak for themselves. The approach has held up, and this doctored Obama image is unlikely to change it. Trump, meanwhile, keeps going back to the same well, dropping the Obamas into fake photos and coded insults whenever he wants a reaction. For someone who talks about the Obamas this often, and this personally, the fixation itself has quietly become the real story, and Sunday’s post is just the newest entry in a very long ledger.
