Category: Fact Check

  • Fact Check: Snakes in the White House? No, US presidents aren’t reptiles

    Politicians can seem cold-blooded sometimes. But according to one Facebook video, they are downright inhuman.

    “Every president we ever had in the United States of America was a draconian reptilian,” the speaker in the Oct. 22 video said. “They are all blood-related. That’s why every president is related; it’s the 13 bloodlines.”

    The bloodlines come from “draconian reptilians that invaded our planet,” he continued. The 13 red stripes on the American flag, the 13 original colonies, and even math from the face of a clock are all marshaled as evidence of this snaky secret.

    This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

    Vice has looked into the man making claims in the video, who goes by Rashad Jamal but whose full name is Rashad Jamal White. The magazine described White as a “New Age prophet” with a large following across several platforms. White also runs a website called the University of Cosmic Intelligence, where he sells videos of lectures, crystals and jewelry.

    Vice reported that White was recently convicted of child molestation and cruelty to children in Georgia. Georgia Department of Corrections’ records confirm a person by that name is incarcerated after convictions on those charges. 

    Claims that celebrities, royalty and politicians are reptilian or “lizard-people” are unfounded and part of a long-running conspiracy theory. We have checked similar claims about Queen Elizabeth II, Pfizer’s CEO, King Charles III, President Joe Biden, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    The theory was popularized by former BBC reporter David Icke, who in 1998 published “The Biggest Secret,” claiming the British royal family were reptiles. But since then, conspiracies of hidden scales have slithered to other popular figures. 

    Lizard people are thought to come from outer space, specifically the constellation “Draco” which is shaped like a serpent, reported Vox – hence “draconian reptiles.”  

    Although President Theodore Roosevelt had a pet snake living in the White House, he was human – along with the other U.S. presidents.

    We rate the claim that all U.S. presidents have been reptiles Pants on Fire!



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  • Fact Check: Is Nikki Haley right that China is largest developer of ‘neuro-strike weapons’?

    EXETER, N.H. — Nikki Haley, a contender for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, has repeated a line on the campaign trail that once drew “audible gasps” at a September event in New Jersey, a blogger reported. 

    She’s said it in a CNBC interview, in Iowa speeches and during an Oct. 12 town hall in this New Hampshire village.

    China is “the largest developer of neuro-strike weapons, weapons engineered to change the brain activity of military commanders and segments of the population,” she said during the town hall in Exeter.

    Weapons that can change people’s brains or thoughts might seem like science fiction. But we found that scientists believe such weapons are not only technologically plausible, but also something that China — and possibly the U.S. — is pursuing. Some say the technology could become reality within a decade.

    The weapons are designed or adapted to affect the central and peripheral nervous system, said James Giordano, a Georgetown University Medical Center neurology and biochemistry professor and executive director of the Institute for Biodefense Research, a federally funded think tank.

    They “represent a clear and present reality in the current and future armamentarium of a number of nations,” Giordano said, adding that China “has dedicated programs in the brain sciences that are directly applicable, and intended for national security, intelligence and defense applications.”

    Edl Schamiloglu is a University of New Mexico professor who studies high-power microwave sources, a subject area that overlaps with potential neuro-weapons. He wrote in 2020 that, based on his visits to China since 2006, “The investment being made by China (in these weapons) dwarfs activity in the U.S. and Russia.” 

    The U.S. government is aware of brain weapon development and in  2021 sanctioned 11 Chinese research entities for using biotechnology processes to support the Chinese military, including “purported brain-control weaponry,” according to a notice in the Federal Register, where the government prints official notices.  

    The notice formalized export sanctions against China, citing the biotechnology’s potential as a tool of political repression against “members of ethnic and religious minority groups,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said. 

    Meanwhile, an unclassified 2023 Defense Department report to Congress described China as researching and developing s Cognitive Domain Operations, which it believes to be the “next evolution of psychological warfare.” Although the report didn’t describe a weapon per se, it said the effort combines traditional psychological warfare with internet and communications platforms, hoping to affect “a target’s cognition and …  change … the target’s decision making and behavior.”

    Haley’s campaign forwarded us several links to evidence, including the Federal Register notice, the Defense Department report and news clips. 

    How neuro-weapons might work

    The research on brain weapons has produced little publicly accessible information. But Georgetown’s Giordano said the weapons would alter “the functions and structure of the brain so as to alter targeted individuals’ thoughts, emotions and behaviors.” 

    A 2020 essay by Schamiloglu, updated in 2022, is one of the few articles to publicly address the technology. In the essay, Schamiloglu, who receives both U.S. military and industry funding for his work, wrote that the quest to build a neuro-weapon to disable military personnel was a staple of Cold War research for both the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

    The weapons work, he wrote, by converting “energy from a power source — a wall plug in a lab or the engine on a military vehicle — into radiated electromagnetic energy and focus it on a target,” either mechanical or human. 

    “The human head acts as a receiving antenna for microwaves in the low gigahertz frequency range,” he wrote. “Pulses of microwaves in these frequencies can cause people to hear sounds.” 

    One example of electromagnetic waves’ effect on human brains can be seen in a U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved device that’s used therapeutically as “transcranial magnetic stimulation.” Health professionals place the device, which contains an electromagnetic coil and looks like a portable hairdryer, near the scalp to treat patients for depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and migraines. 

    Transcranial magnetic stimulation is a noninvasive way to get electrical energy across the head’s insulating tissues and into the brain. (National Institutes of Health)

    The electromagnetic coil “delivers magnetic pulses that stimulate nerve cells in the region of your brain involved in mood control and depression,” according to the Mayo Clinic. “It’s thought to activate regions of the brain that have decreased activity during depression.”

    Beyond its therapeutic uses, there’s evidence that the device can temporarily garble human speech. In 2011, Roger Highfield, an editor with the British magazine New Scientist, had himself videotaped while being treated with the device. In the video, Highfield’s recitation of a nursery rhyme was interrupted by the device’s magnetic interference.

    Another video from 2021 appears to show the same type of results. Scientific papers have also confirmed that the device seems to alter speech patterns.

    Havana syndrome and neuro-weapons 

    Discussion of neuro-weapons has been further muddied by controversy over “Havana syndrome,” which emerged in 2016 when diplomats from the U.S. State Department  in Cuba reported unexplained headaches, nausea, hearing loss, lightheadedness and cognitive problems. Other U.S. diplomats later reported similar symptoms while in China and other countries.

    Although many of these cases were ultimately determined to have mundane causes, such as exposure to environmental toxins, two reports concluded that an energy weapon could have caused some of the symptoms. 

    A December 2020 report by the National Academy of Sciences and a February 2022 report by a panel of experts concluded that, despite a variety of uncertainties, a weapon using “pulsed radiofrequency energy” or “pulsed electromagnetic energy” plausibly caused some Havana syndrome cases. Pulsed power involves short but extremely powerful electrical pulses. 

    Complicating the understanding of Havana syndrome was a third report by U.S. intelligence agencies that rebutted the notion that a foreign nation had caused the illnesses, either by using a directed energy weapon or as an unintended consequence of other activity.

    The United States Embassy in Havana, Cuba, on Oct. 3, 2017. U.S. diplomats complained of symptoms that some believe may have come from a directed energy attack. It has become known as Havana syndrome. (AP)

    Following the Havana syndrome debate, neuro-weapons have attracted some attention among national security experts and media.This year, The Washington Times, a conservative newspaper, has published two articles about the technology, and China’s role in it.

    But experts say little is known about how far along the research is, in China or the U.S. It’s also unclear how much of the research is offensive or defensive.

    Our ruling

    Haley said China is “the largest developer of neuro-strike weapons” engineered to change brain activity.  

    Neuro-weapons research is so shrouded in secrecy that it’s hard to know exactly where research in China or the U.S. stands. But multiple experts said the technology is plausible and China has pursued it for years.

    In 2021, the U.S. sanctioned 11 Chinese research institutes for using biotechnology processes to support the Chinese military, including “purported brain-control weaponry.”   

    And an unclassified 2023 Defense Department report said China is developing a program it calls Cognitive Domain Operations that combines traditional psychological warfare with internet and communications platforms, hoping to affect “a target’s cognition and resulting in a change in the target’s decision making and behavior.”

    We rate Haley’s statement Mostly True.



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  • Fact Check: Ron DeSantis in 2018 backed a bill drafting a path for Puerto Rico statehood, but did not author it

    A TV ad in Iowa from a political action committee supporting former President Donald Trump tells voters that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has “sold out” conservatives. 

    “Liberals have a plan to make Puerto Rico a state, adding two Democrats to the Senate. And Ron DeSantis sided with the liberals’ power play,” MAGA Inc.’s ad said. “DeSantis actually sponsored the bill to make Puerto Rico a state. With more power, liberals can pack the courts, pass more reckless spending, ban guns and give amnesty to illegal aliens.”

    Puerto Rico has been under U.S. control since 1898. Puerto Ricans can’t vote for president and don’t have representation in the U.S. House or Senate despite being U.S. citizens. Puerto Rico has one resident commissioner in the House who can vote only in the congressional committees.

    PolitiFact found that DeSantis, who’s vying for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, co-sponsored a 2018 bill that established a process for a path to statehood for Puerto Rico. 

    MAGA Inc.’s ad said DeSantis “sponsored” the bill, which can give the impression that he authored the bill, but he did not.

    DeSantis supported bill that outlined path for Puerto Rico’s statehood

    MAGA Inc.’s ad cites the 2018 bill and a 2022 Newsweek article about a subsequent version of the bill. (DeSantis became Florida governor in 2019.)

    As a congressman, DeSantis was one of 58 co-sponsors of H.R.6246, the Puerto Rico Admission Act of 2018, which established a process to allow the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico to become a state.

    When Puerto Rico’s resident commissioner Jenniffer Gonzalez Colon introduced the bill, she said that it charted the path for statehood by Jan. 1, 2021.

    The bill had the support of 32 Democrats and 26 Republicans, including 12 co-sponsors from Florida evenly split between both parties. 

    Florida is home to more than 1.1 million Puerto Ricans. Florida lawmakers courted Puerto Ricans in 2018 after tens of thousands moved there after Hurricane Maria devastated the island territory.

    “We are going to be taking the case to the Puerto Rican community because you know what? They serve in our military more than almost anyone as a group, they care about education, they work as hard as anybody,” DeSantis said in June 2018 as he ran for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, according to The Associated Press. “They are natural Republicans.”

    Bryan Griffin, a DeSantis campaign spokesperson, said the 2018 legislation “didn’t grant or take a position on Puerto Rican statehood; it clarified the process by which statehood would be granted to ensure it was subject to the will of the American people and a full congressional vote.”

    Griffin cited a line in the bill that said: “Congressional intent — The enactment of this Act expresses the intent of Congress to pass legislation based upon the Task Force’s final report.” 

    The bill called for a task force to research whether any U.S. laws should be amended or repealed, recommend economic measures to assist Puerto Rico, propose timelines for federal elections and study how Puerto Rico’s statehood would affect the House. 

    The bill also said that after Congress received a final report from the task force, “Puerto Rico will cease to be an unincorporated territory of the United States” and be admitted “into the Union as a State no later than January 1, 2021.”

    Versions of the bill in 2022 and 2023 haven’t been made into law, either.

    Griffin did not respond to PolitiFact’s question about DeSantis’ current position on statehood. The New York Times reported in October that DeSantis sounded skeptical about broadly granting statehood to U.S. territories.

    Republican party platform called for statehood for decades

    The national Republican party platform has supported Puerto Rico’s statehood as far back as 1940. (Many of the platforms specified statehood if the residents wanted it.) 

    Trump has flip-flopped on statehood for Puerto Rico. He supported it in 2016, but two years later, as he feuded with a mayor in Puerto Rico over the federal government’s hurricane response, Trump said he was an “absolute no.”

    Florida’s U.S. senators, Republicans Rick Scott and Marco Rubio, supported statehood in 2018, the year DeSantis co-sponsored the House bill. 

    Admitting Puerto Rico as a state would likely increase the number of Democrats in the House and add two Democratic senators, said Jorge Duany, Florida International University’s director of the Cuban Research Institute, an academic research center.

    “Whether that number would alter the balance of power in Congress is an open-ended question, depending on the preexisting share of congressional Republicans and Democrats,” Duany said.

    Our ruling

    A MAGA Inc. ad said DeSantis “actually sponsored the bill to make Puerto Rico a state.”

    DeSantis co-sponsored a 2018 bill that outlined steps that Congress could take to make Puerto Rico a state by 2021. He was not the bill’s original sponsor or author — he was one of dozens of co-sponsors from both parties. The legislation outlined several steps a task force needed to take before statehood could occur.

    DeSantis’ current stance on this issue is unclear.

    We rate this claim Mostly True.

    RELATED: Fact-checking 2024 presidential candidates, who’s running



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  • Fact Check: Old photos, including one from 2019, don’t show Gaza on Oct. 27

    Since Hamas attacked Israel Oct. 7, killing 1,400 people, Israel has responded with airstrikes and a ground offensive that Gaza’s Health Ministry reports have killed more than 8,000. The continuing siege threatens to cut off supplies of fuel, food and water for Gazans.

    “Gaza tonight. When the skies are lit with terror,” an Instagram user said in an Oct. 27 post, showing photos of buildings tinged orange against a backdrop of fire and smoke.

    The post featured a collage of six photos and claimed it showed Gaza on that night, after heavy airstrikes affected telecommunications services in Gaza.

    (Screenshot from Instagram)

    Although images from Gaza show widespread destruction and human devastation, this collage’s photos don’t sync with the Instagram post’s date. None are from Oct. 27 and one was from March 2019, after reported Israeli strikes in Gaza City, as described by Agence France-Presse.

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Two of the photos were uploaded weeks ago, on Oct. 9. Agence France-Presse’s photo was captioned, “A fireball erupts from an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on October 9, 2023.” Another photo was taken Oct. 8, with this caption by The Associated Press: “Fire and smoke rise following an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, Sunday, Oct. 8, 2023.”

    Another photo was uploaded by Agence France-Presse on Oct. 10 and captioned, “Explosions illuminate the sky during Israeli strikes on Gaza City on October 10, 2023.” 

    Finally, one photo was uploaded Oct. 24 by Quds News Network, a website that focuses on Palestinian news. It captioned the photo, “Local sources: A timber depot in Jabalya, #Gaza went up in flames following an Israeli strike using a white phosphorus bomb.”

    We rate the claim that these photos show Gaza the night of Oct. 27 False.



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  • Fact Check: No hay un nuevo subsidio del gobierno que se pueda usar para cualquier gasto

    Una publicación en Facebook dice que puedes usar un crédito federal para cualquier gasto, incluyendo regalos navideños, pero eso es falso.

    “Millones de americanos ya obtuvieron sus $1,200 gracias a un nuevo subsidio del gobierno, y es mucho mejor que los stimulus checks, así es el negocio”, dice la publicación del 20 de octubre. “Ellos te dan esta tarjeta de gastos de salud con $1,200 y literalmente la recargan cada mes y puedes usar el dinero para todo lo que desees o necesites”.

    El narrador afirma que el dinero se puede usar para gasolina, renta, comida, o “hasta ropa nueva o regalos para las navidades”. 

    Según el video, es fácil ser aprobado y para calificar es suficiente ser ciudadano americano y no tener ni Medicare ni Medicaid. 

    La publicación fue marcada como parte del esfuerzo de Meta para combatir las noticias falsas y la desinformación en su plataforma. (Lea más sobre nuestra colaboración con Meta, propietaria de Facebook e Instagram).

    No es cierto que haya un subsidio nuevo que ofrezca tarjetas de salud mensuales con $1,200 para gastar en “todo lo que desees o necesites”.

    Lo que sí existe desde 2020 son tarjetas de débito, conocidas como “flex cards”, proveídas por planes privados de Medicare Advantage. Los fondos y límites en estas tarjetas varían y se pueden usar para comida, medicamentos, y copagos de atención odontológica, auditiva y oftalmológica.

    Las “flex cards” solo son para personas de más de 65 años que califican para Medicare. Otro requerimiento para obtener una de estas tarjetas es sufrir una enfermedad crónica. Además, los fondos de la tarjeta se deben usar para gastos que permitan mejorar o mantener la salud del afiliado.

    El video en Facebook dirige a una página web en inglés la cual menciona la Ley del Cuidado de Salud a Bajo Precio (ACA, por sus siglas en inglés). Asimismo, un cuestionario en esa página pregunta si ganas menos de $50,000 al año y si cuentas con seguro médico. 

    La página web dirige a llamar a un número de teléfono para supuestamente aplicar al beneficio de salud y las subvenciones. PolitiFact llamó en diversas ocasiones (a distintos números ofrecidos al responder el cuestionario) pero no obtuvo respuesta. 

    Los Centros de Servicios de Medicare y Medicaid (CMS, por sus siglas en inglés) animan a las personas a denunciar cualquier sospecha de fraude. Los centros advierten que el mejor sitio con información sobre elegibilidad para los beneficios de Medicare en inglés o español es Medicare.gov, y no páginas web alternativas.

    Nuestro veredicto

    Una publicación en Facebook dice que un nuevo subsidio del gobierno ofrece una tarjeta de salud con $1,200 al mes y “puedes usar el dinero para todo lo que desees o necesites”. 

    Eso es engañoso, no existe un nuevo programa que ofrezca este libre uso de $1,200 al mes. 

    Desde 2020, algunas personas que cumplen ciertos requisitos pueden obtener tarjetas llamadas “flex cards” bajo los planes de Medicare Advantage. Los fondos disponibles varían y estas tarjetas solo se pueden usar para alimentos, medicamentos y cuidado de salud.

    Calificamos la publicación como Falsa.

    Lea más reportes de PolitiFact en Español aquí.

    _______________________________________________

    Debido a limitaciones técnicas, partes de nuestra página web aparecen en inglés. Estamos trabajando en mejorar la presentación.



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  • Fact Check: Biden urged aid for Israel, Ukraine. He didn’t declare World War III

    A video in a recent Facebook post cobbles together quotes from an Oct. 19 address by President Joe Biden as evidence that the commander in chief has confirmed World War III is underway. 

    “Joe Biden just announced World War III live on TV,” a narrator in the video says. “In case you missed it, Joe Biden just addressed the nation regarding the wars in Ukraine, and the situation in Israel and, well, things are starting to get biblical.” 

    The video, which appears to have originated on TikTok, cuts to Biden sitting at a desk. 

    “We’re facing an inflection point in history,” Biden says. “One of those moments and the decisions we make today are going to determine the decades to come.”

    The narrator then says, “Now, I want you to listen to some of the things he said, and pay close attention to some of the language he uses because it’s extremely important.”

    Here are some of the quotes from Biden: 

    • “The terrorist group Hamas unleashed pure, unadulterated evil in the world. But sadly, the Jewish people know, perhaps better than anyone, that there is no limit to the depravity of people when they want to inflict pain on others.”  

    • “You know, the assault on Israel echoes nearly 20 months of war, tragedy and brutality inflicted on the people of Ukraine — people that were very badly hurt since Putin launched his all-out invasion.” 

    • “Hamas and Putin represent different threats, but they share this in common: They both want to completely annihilate a neighboring democracy — completely annihilate it. Hamas, its stated purpose for existing is the destruction of the state of Israel and the murder of Jewish people.” 

    • “I know these conflicts can seem far away and it’s natural to ask: Why does this matter to America? So let me share with you why making sure Israel and Ukraine succeed is vital for America’s national security. You know, history has taught us that when terrorists don’t pay a price for their terror, when dictators don’t pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos and death and more destruction. They keep going, and the cost and the threats to America and to the world keep rising. So, if we don’t stop Putin’s appetite for power and control in Ukraine, he won’t limit himself just to Ukraine. … Putin has already threatened to ‘remind,’ quote, ‘remind’ Poland that their western land was a gift from Russia.”

    • “If Putin attacks a NATO ally, we will defend every inch of NATO, which the treaty requires and calls for. We will have something that we do not seek — make it clear — we do not seek, we do not seek to have American troops fighting in Russia or fighting against Russia. Beyond Europe, we know that our allies and, maybe most importantly, our adversaries and competitors are watching. They’re watching our response in Ukraine as well. And if we walk away and let Putin erase Ukraine’s independence, would-be aggressors around the world would be emboldened to try the same. The risk of conflict and chaos could spread in other parts of the world, in the Indo-Pacific, in the Middle East — especially in the Middle East. Iran is supporting Russia in Ukraine, and it’s supporting Hamas and other terrorist groups in the region. And we’ll continue to hold them accountable.”

    • “Just as in World War II, today, patriotic American workers are building the arsenal of democracy and serving the cause of freedom.” 

     

    The narrator resumes talking here. 

    “See what he’s doing here?” he says. “He’s referencing World War II in order to try and convince people that today is just as dangerous and to basically prepare for World War III.”  

    Text flanking the video says: “Joe Biden confirms WW3 live on TV.”

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    Biden’s comments come from an Oct. 19 speech about the U.S. response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel and the ongoing Russian war in Ukraine. But his remarks supporting wartime aid for Israel and Ukraine do not amount to a confirmation of World War III, something Biden never mentions.

    Biden also said  he was not aiming to send American troops into the battles in Ukraine or Israel.

     

    • “It’s a smart investment that’s going to pay dividends for American security for generations, help us keep American troops out of harm’s way, help us build a world that is safer, more peaceful, and more prosperous for our children and grandchildren.”

    • “From the outset, I have said I will not send American troops to fight in Ukraine.”

     

    If Biden announced World War III, it’s safe to say it would be more widely covered than in a Facebook or a TikTok video. Instead, news coverage reflected his desire to send money to help Israel and Ukraine. 

    “President Biden gave a rare Oval Office address Thursday night to make the case that it is in Americans’ best interests to hike funding for Israel after the deadly Hamas attack — and to support additional funding for Ukraine, embroiled in its long fight against Russia,” NPR said. 

    “President Joe Biden’s task, as he looked America in the eye from the Oval Office, was to explain why a nation wearied by its own foreign quagmires and political estrangements should send $100 billion to help other people fight wars,” CNN echoed.

    And CBS News’ headline said, “Biden makes case that aid for Israel and Ukraine will ‘pay dividends for American security.’”

    We rate claims Biden confirmed World War III on live TV — or anywhere — False.

     



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  • Fact Check: Contrary to social media claims, the media covered this historic moment (when it happened in 2018)

    An Oct. 22 Facebook post suggests that the media has ignored a recent historic moment: North and South Korea’s leaders meeting in the demilitarized zone between the two countries.

    “History made again,” the post said. “This gave me chills. You won’t see this on the television or hear about it on the radio. We the people all across the world want peace not war!”

    A TikTok video shared in the post includes the text: “New history: Kim Jong Un shakes hands with South Korean leader as they both cross borders for the first time.”  

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    You might not see this on TV today because it’s not new history. It happened in April 2018, and it was widely covered in the media. 

    The TikTok video gives this away. The footage in it comes from The Guardian, which posted it on YouTube on April 26, 2018.

    Here’s a sampling of TV and radio news headlines about the meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and then-South Korean President Moon Jae-in: 

    • From CNBC: “Smiling and holding hands, the leaders of the two Koreas meet at historic summit” 

    • From CBS News: “Kim Jong Un walks across border to meet South Korean president”

    • From ABC News: “North Korea’s Kim Jong Un crosses DMZ line for historic meeting with South Korea”

    • From NPR: “In South Korea, summit with North Korea is greeted with hope — and skepticism”

    We rate claims this is new history that the media didn’t cover False.

     



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  • Fact Check: UCLA protesters didn’t advocate for ‘Jewish genocide’ at Oct. 25 rally

    As some U.S. college students protest Israel’s response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel, social media posts are mischaracterizing the chants echoing on university campuses. 

    We previously debunked a claim that University of Pennsylvania students were caught on video chanting, “We want Jewish genocide.” 

    Now, a similar claim is being leveled against students at the University of California, Los Angeles.

    “In UCLA hundreds of students chanting: ‘Israel Israel you can’t hide, we want Jewish genocide,’” reads an Oct. 30 Instagram post. “This is not 1930s Germany, this is in Los Angeles October 26th 2023!”

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    A video in the post shows what appears to be the UCLA campus (“Go Bruins!” signs hang from lampposts.) 

    And chanting can be heard in the video, but as was the case at UPenn, protesters are saying, “Israel, Israel, you can’t hide, we charge you with genocide.” They aren’t saying, “We want Jewish genocide.”

    On Oct. 25, students at UCLA’s Bruin Plaza participated in a “walkout to fight genocide and free Palestine,” Getty Images wrote in a photo caption of the event. The Daily Bruin, the school’s student newspaper, reported the event was organized by student groups on campus, including Students for Justice in Palestine at UCLA and Jewish Voice for Peace at UCLA.

    Dan Gold, executive director of Hillel at UCLA, a group that aims to “be the home away from home at UCLA for all Jewish students,” objected to the chant, “We charge you with genocide,” while also acknowledging in an Oct. 27 statement that “many social media posts misquoted the chant as, ‘We want Jewish genocide.’”

    “The actual rhetoric and language against Israel and Jews were equally unacceptable,” Gold said in the statement. 

    But claims protesters chanted, “We want Jewish genocide” are False.

     



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  • Fact Check: Rick Scott warns about fentanyl in Halloween candy, but experts say there’s no connection

    As children ready themselves for a night of trick-or-treating, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., cautioned families to be wary of fentanyl-laced pills that look like Halloween candy.

    “Deadly drugs and cartels cross our southern border each and every day, leaving not even our kids safe as fake pills laced with fentanyl are beginning to look like candy,” Scott said in a video shared Oct. 31 on X, formerly Twitter. “By working together and being on high alert this Halloween, we help put an end to the drug traffickers that are driving addiction and poisoning our neighbors and our children.”

    Although Scott’s claim sounds scary, drug policy experts say there’s no evidence brightly colored pills, powder or blocks containing fentanyl — dubbed “rainbow fentanyl” — are sneaking into kids’ Halloween candy sacks.

    When we reached out to Scott’s team for evidence, Clare Lattanze, a spokesperson for his office, wrote back: “Senator Scott will continue to urge caution for families on Halloween and every other day so that kids stay safe.”

    Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that can be lethal even in extremely small doses. It’s about 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

    Because of fentanyl’s deadliness, misleading claims about the drug have proliferated online. PolitiFact has debunked several common myths about fentanyl, including that touching an item containing fentanyl can cause an overdose.

    In August 2022, the Drug Enforcement Agency issued a warning that drug cartels were making fentanyl look like candy to target young people. Rainbow fentanyl has been found in a variety of colors, shapes and sizes, the agency said.

    The agency’s warning did not mention Halloween. DEA Administrator Anne Milgram told NBC News and Fox News in September 2022 that the agency has not seen any connection between rainbow fentanyl and Halloween.

    Nevertheless, in the months following the release of that DEA report, Republican politicians raised alarm over Halloween candy possibly being tainted with fentanyl. Those misleading claims persist, in the tradition of other concerns about Halloween candy contaminated with poison, needles or razors that are largely unfounded.

    Families are encouraged to check their children’s Halloween candy for potential tampering or dangerous substances. But experts have repeatedly told news outlets, including NPR, The Washington Post, Vox and USA Today, that it’s highly unlikely fentanyl will be found among the treats.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends inspecting candy and throwing away anything with signs of tampering, such as discoloration, tiny pinholes and tears in wrappers.

    PolitiFact rates claims based on what’s known when the statement is made.

    Based on available information, we rate the claim that rainbow fentanyl is a threat to children on Halloween False.

    UPDATE, Oct. 31, 2023: This story has been updated to include a statement from Scott’s office.

    RELATED: Common myths about fentanyl debunked: No, you can’t accidentally overdose by touching fentanyl



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  • Fact Check: Old footage of Palestinians’ deaths shared amid current violence

    An old video is being shared amid the current Israel-Hamas war, but it predates the latest conflict. 

    “Palestinian journalist films the moment an Israeli strike kills him and a fellow medic on live TV,” reads text above the video. It shows two people cowering amid rubble and dust before an explosion. Then, the camera falls. A motionless hand stays in its frame. 

    “Both Fouad Jaber and Khaled Hamad were killed by this missile,” text appearing on the screen says. “Khaled’s camera continued to record after he died.” 

    An Oct. 25 X post sharing the video said: “In two weeks we have witnessed heartbreak after heartbreak, and this footage adds to another horror, killed in the line of duty.” 

    An Oct. 30 Instagram post sharing the video was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    The footage in the video comes from Al Jazeera, which shared it in a segment on Gaza that was posted to YouTube on July 20, 2016. 

    This particular clip was filmed July 20, 2014, according to text in the Al Jazeera video. It starts around the 32:45 mark. 

    “On July 8, 2014, Israel launched Operation Protective Edge, aimed at stopping alleged rocket fire from Gaza into occupied territories,” the YouTube caption says, going on to refer to a neighborhood in the Gaza Strip. “In this film, cameraman Khaled Hamad joins local paramedics in Shujayea as they attend to the dead and wounded at the height of the raid. Risking his life, he documents atrocities committed against civilians in the neighborhood during Operation Protective Edge.” 

    The Guardian covered Hamad’s death, reporting July 20, 2014, that Hamad was killed in Gaza that day, “reportedly during Israeli artillery shelling of the city’s Shujaya residential district.” 

    We rate claims that this footage is from October 2023 and the violence that has occurred since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7 False.



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