April 17, 2026
Hoo, boy, did the legacy media really have President Donald Trump and his policies dead to rights this time. On Thursday, readers began seeing photos of meals being served to U.S. service members serving in the Middle East being posted on social media, and they were brutal. They made Michelle...

Hoo, boy, did the legacy media really have President Donald Trump and his policies dead to rights this time.

On Thursday, readers began seeing photos of meals being served to U.S. service members serving in the Middle East being posted on social media, and they were brutal. They made Michelle Obama’s school lunches look good.

The photos were first published by USA Today, under an article titled, “Cookies, deodorant, socks. Iran war puts military packages in limbo.”

From that piece, by Cybele Mayes-Osterman:

Dan F. was alarmed when his daughter, a Marine aboard the USS Tripoli, a warship deployed to fight the Iran war, sent him a photo of a meal served on the ship. A lunch tray, two-thirds empty, carried one small scoop of shredded meat and a single folded tortilla.

A picture of a mid-April dinner on the USS Abraham Lincoln, shared by a service member with his family, was similarly unappetizing – a small handful of boiled carrots, a dry meat patty and a gray slab of processed meat.

Dan and other military family members worried that their loved ones deployed to the Middle East are going hungry are filling boxes with items they hope could help service members ride out prolonged deployments in the Middle East – homemade fudge, Jolly Ranchers, crossword puzzle books, playing cards, toothpaste, Girl Scout cookies and fresh socks. But mail delivery to military ZIP codes across the Middle East has been indefinitely suspended as of April, and packages in transit now hang in limbo.

It didn’t take long for these photos to circulate, posted by other journalists and liberals. (And yes, I do repeat myself, again.)

Here’s one from Evan Hill of The Washington Post, who noted that the report quoted a sailor as telling his mother that rations “are going to get really low” and “morale is going to be at an all-time low.”

There was a certain radical credulousness at work in all of this: The U.S. military, effectively built to survive war with the world’s great powers — China! Russia! North Korea! (if you want to count them) — was scraping by on virtually nothing because a few stray Iranian drones were managing to find their way into the Strait of Hormuz, or something.

Related:

Where Was All This Democrat Anger When These Images of Obama as Jesus Were Everywhere?

The problem with posting these pictures on social media, however, is that viewers get to examine them in fuller context — which users did, calling out fatal credibility issues in how this was being presented:

And some users pointed out that context means everything.

Remember, it wasn’t that long ago that liberals were criticizing Secretary of War Pete Hegseth for feeding the troops too well.

Look, it’s no secret that military food is not Spago, or even Chipotle. It’s, well, edible and nutritive. I’ve never heard those who are served it describe it as anything more, but I’ve also never heard them describe it as less. To quote Noah Wylie’s character in “A Few Good Men,” it’s “three squares a day.”

Also, you can watch how these meals are prepared onboard America’s largest aircraft carrier, again thanks to social media:

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And most of USA Today’s piece had to do with the hold-up of care packages, something that a curator at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum, Lynn Heidelbaugh, said happens in times of conflict.

“There are always extenuating circumstances,” she said. “It’s far more complex than domestic mail.”

United States Postal Service historian Steve Kochersperger confirmed this.

“Interruptions and delays in mail service have been a part of every American conflict since the Revolutionary War. Communications and supply networks that work well during peacetime are invariably disrupted during wartime,” he told the paper, citing the “tremendous backlog of mail following the D-Day invasion of 1944.”

“Non-expedited shipping of packages to the Middle East usually takes up to 24 days, the Postal Service says. In 2003, mail took an average 11 to 14 days to reach service members deployed to the Iraq war, according to a Government Accountability Office report,” the piece noted.

So this is basically a nuanced piece of some length about care packages being held up, and the media’s takeaway on the socials was … our troops are starving because Iran has brought us to our knees, somehow? Even though they hadn’t, and the pictures were misleading, and context was denuded, but whatever. Starving troops, hear it here first!

I have not kept count of how many pieces I have had to end — this year alone, even! — with my amazement at the legacy media’s amazement that we have so little trust in them. At this point, it’s beginning to feel like a hack’s crutch. And yet, the amazement does continue: I stare anew, agog, at a screen from institutions begging for our trust as they find new and novel ways to lie that social media can debunk in hours, if not minutes.

If you want to find out about the logistics of care packages during times of conflict, read the USA Today piece in its entirety. I’m not sure it’s wholly believable and it certainly isn’t without obvious slant, but it’s not reprehensible journalism in and of itself.

If you want to find out how the men and women of our U.S. Armed Forces are eating, do not rely on selectively edited pictures that came out of an article about something else entirely, flogged by a WaPo apparatchik that had zero to do with the original piece and either didn’t absorb the gist of it or thought you lacked the attention span to realize he was misrepresenting it.

C. Douglas Golden is a writer who splits his time between the United States and Southeast Asia. Specializing in political commentary and world affairs, he’s written for Conservative Tribune and The Western Journal since 2014.

C. Douglas Golden is a writer who splits his time between the United States and Southeast Asia. Specializing in political commentary and world affairs, he’s written for Conservative Tribune and The Western Journal since 2014. Aside from politics, he enjoys spending time with his wife, literature (especially British comic novels and modern Japanese lit), indie rock, coffee, Formula One and football (of both American and world varieties).

Birthplace

Morristown, New Jersey

Education

Catholic University of America

Languages Spoken

English, Spanish

Topics of Expertise

American Politics, World Politics, Culture

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