Tag: United States

  • Fact Check: Altered image shows Las Vegas Sphere displaying Israeli flag. That didn’t happen

    The Sphere venue in Las Vegas has an outdoor LED screen that can turn the orb into everything from a giant jack-o’-lantern to a seascape.

    But a recent video shared widely on X that appeared to show the Sphere displaying the Israeli flag amid violence in the country was altered.  

    “This image was photoshopped,” Sphere wrote Oct. 11 on X. 

    The venue has been the subject of misinformation before. 

    In July, we fact-checked a claim that the Sphere showed a crude message directed at President Joe Biden. That image was also fabricated. 

    We rate posts that the Sphere displayed the Israeli flag False.



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  • Fact Check: Falso: La Esfera de Las Vegas no se ilumino con la bandera israelí

    La Esfera en Las Vegas tiene afuera una pantalla LED que puede cambiar la apariencia de la órbita, incluyendo de calabaza a una imagen  marina.

    Unos videos recientes compartidos ampliamente en Facebook, X y TikTok muestran la Esfera iluminandose con la bandera israelí, tras la violencia en el país. Pero estas imágenes fueron alteradas. 

    “Esta imagen fue photoshopped”, la cuenta de la Esfera escribió el 11 de octubre en X.

    No es la primera vez que surge desinformación sobre la Esfera.

    En julio, verificamos la declaración de que la Esfera mostraba un mensaje derogatorio dirigido al Presidente Joe Biden. Esta imagen también era falsa.

    Calificamos las publicaciones que muestran a la Esfera iluminada con la bandera israelí como Falsa. 

    Una versión de este artículo originalmente fue escrita en inglés y traducida por Maria Briceño.

    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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  • Volleyball begins postseason with area tournaments

    Volleyball begins postseason with area tournaments

    Published 11:00 am Saturday, October 14, 2023

    All six county volleyball teams are in action next week as the postseason gets underway with area tournaments scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 17, and Thursday, Oct. 19.

    Andalusia will play Tuesday. Florala, Opp, Pleasant Home, Red Level, and Straughn will all play Thursday.

    Each area will conduct an area tournament with single-elimination play using a best 3-out-of-5 format. Each area winner and runner-up will advance to the South Super Regional at the Cramton Bowl Multiplex in Montgomery from Wednesday, Oct. 25, through Friday, Oct. 27.

    Tickets must be purchased online through the AHSAA’s ticketing partner GoFan with admission set at $8 plus a convenience fee. Links for each area tournament are provided below.

    All area, super regional, and state tournament contests are the property of the AHSAA. Live streaming of any AHSAA event outside of the regular season is prohibited and will result in a $500 fine for any school that has a set/match streamed.

    The complete area tournament schedule with each team’s seeding is as follows:

    Tuesday, Oct. 17
    4A Area 3 at Geneva

    Thursday, Oct. 19
    1A Area 1 at Kinston

    Thursday, Oct. 19
    1A Area 2 at Pleasant Home

    Thursday, Oct. 19
    3A Area 3 at Straughn

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  • Fact Check: False flag claims amid Israel-Hamas violence lack evidence

    Thousands of people have been killed or injured amid fighting between Israel and Hamas, and recent online claims that the militant group’s Oct. 7 attack on the country is a false flag defies reality. 

    “You are witnessing the biggest false flag and psyop committed on the world by Israel in real time since 9/11, an Oct. 8 Instagram post says. (A psyop, or psychological operation, is a military mission designed to influence targeted people’s behaviors and emotions.)

    “FALSE FLAG,” an Oct. 9 post says. “Hamas is the creation of the Israeli government and they planned these attacks and allowed them to garner support for a mass genocide and likely leading to World War III.”

    These posts were 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.)

    Palestinian cleric Sheikh Ahmed Yassin founded Hamas as a political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1987 following a Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, PBS reported. The next year, Hamas published a charter calling for Israel’s destruction and the establishment of an Islamic society in historic Palestine. 

    On Oct. 7, Hamas launched thousands of missiles from Gaza as militants charged into Israel using bulldozers, motorcycles and paragliders. Militants opened fire on Israelis and took hostages, and the Israeli military launched retaliatory strikes in Gaza.

    The war continues, and has been documented by people on the ground there, including citizens and journalists.

    Unfounded false flag allegations often follow incidents of mass violence, including school shootings, the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, and chaos at the Kabul airport as the Taliban took over Afghanistan’s capital in 2021.

    Intelligence agencies do launch false flag operations, but other than social media rumors, we found no credible evidence to support claims that the current Israel-Hamas war is one. 

    As we’ve reported, actual false flags plotted in history appear to have been outpaced in recent years by dubious conspiracy theories that label real events as “false flags” that, in turn, were allegedly used to justify the expansion of government powers. That line of thinking took off after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks spawned a new war overseas and a scaled up surveillance state. 

    Experts warn that social media rumors alleging that big events in the news are “false flags” should be viewed skeptically. Real false flag operations are logistically complex; they rope in significant numbers of people and force leaders to consider complicated ethical questions.

    A day after the Oct. 7 attack, Israeli health officials said more than 700 people were dead in Israel. As of Oct. 12, Israel’s military has said more than 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’ attack, CBS News reported. The Gaza Ministry of Health has said at least 1,537 people have been killed in Gaza by Israel’s retaliatory strikes.

    In line with other claims we have checked that falsely allege large-scale violent events were not real, we rate claims that the recent violence in the Middle East is a false flag Pants on Fire!



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  • Andalusia native to lead arts, creative research at University of Michigan

    Andalusia native to lead arts, creative research at University of Michigan

    Published 9:15 am Saturday, October 14, 2023

    Andalusia native Clare Croft was recently selected to a leadership position aimed at expanding and integrating the arts in faculty research at the University of Michigan.

    Clare Croft, a dance historian, theorist and curator who has spearheaded national efforts to strengthen arts infrastructure, will serve a three-year appointment as the university’s first director of arts research/creative practice.

    Clare was born in Andalusia and attended city schools through the tenth grade and went on to graduate from the Alabama School of Fine Arts in 1996.

    She is the daughter of former Andalusia teachers, John Croft and the late Rozilyn Croft. John Croft was known locally as the “Voice of the Andy Bulldogs,” calling Andalusia football games on local radio for about 30 years. John now lives in Daphne and Rozilyn passed away earlier this year.

    Clare said growing up in Andalusia provided her valuable lessons that she carries in both her professional and personal life.

    “Growing up in a small town, you learn that building relationships is a key to success,” she said. “I work (and live) in larger contexts now with a lot more people around, but knowing that it’s both important and joyful to know the people with whom you’re working is key and something I saw all around me growing up.”

    Her passion for dance and writing also began in Andalusia where she was active with Andalusia Ballet where she was encouraged to combine the two.

    “I loved dancing from the time I was little. I took my first class at Andalusia Ballet when I was 3, back when the Ballet was still just a series of classes offered out of the Murphy’s home,” Clare said. “The only thing I loved nearly as much as I loved dancing was writing. When I was about 14, [Andalusia Ballet director] Meryane Murphy told me there were people who wrote about dance for a career. I’m sure it was a passing comment, but I held onto it tightly. I wrote my first piece about dance around the same time, and The Andalusia Star-News published it. My interests in intertwining dance and writing continued to grow. I studied dance history and criticism in college, and that helped launch my professional writing career, which has included writing for The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun, and the Austin American-Statesman. I then returned to graduate school to get my PhD, partially because I wanted to be able to write, teach, and talk about dance full-time. I guess it matters what you say to teenagers!”

    Her latest role with the University of Michigan’s Arts Initiative is a broad effort to emphasize the value of the arts within the context of a leading public research university.

    “As a scholar, teacher, audience member and dancer, I know firsthand that the arts are a field of study and inquiry that fosters critical, deliberative and imaginative thinking, and does so with an emphasis on collaboration, even care,” said Croft, who is also an associate professor of American culture and of women’s and gender studies in LSA, and associate professor of music in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance.

    “The arts must be a crucial piece of life at a research university, as they bring what scientists might call new discoveries; what social scientists might call new perspectives; and what humanists might call new insights. I am excited to develop new funding programs and support systems to assist my fellow faculty members in deepening and elevating their work.

    As director, Croft will develop strategy, design funding programs and enhance infrastructure for arts research and creative practice across U-M. Her efforts will closely align with the goals of the Arts Initiative, a universitywide endeavor launched in 2019 to illuminate and expand human connections, inspire collaborative creativity, and build a more just and equitable world through the arts.

    She will collaborate with faculty, staff and students across disciplines to identify and address needs and gaps within the arts research space.

    With support from the Arts Initiative and OVPR, Croft will develop and administer a new five-year, $2.5 million program that is designed to support faculty-led arts research and creative practice. The program will announce its initial call for proposals this fall.

    Croft received a Ph.D. in performance as public practice from the University of Texas at Austin. She joined U-M as an assistant professor in 2010, and during her tenure in Ann Arbor, Croft has held faculty appointments in the Michigan Society of Fellows, LSA and SMTD.

    “As an educator, administrator and performer, Dr. Croft brings a tremendous wealth of experience and expertise to this new leadership position, and with her strong support and leadership, the University of Michigan will continue to push research boundaries by articulating a strong vision spanning arts integrative research through creative practice,” said Geoffrey Thün, associate vice president for research – social sciences, humanities and the arts.

    Clare said she owes much of her professional success to the lessons she learned growing up in Andalusia and as a student of the Andalusia Ballet.

    “I have no idea what my life would be without Meryane Murphy. Andalusia Ballet was my second home. She obviously instilled my love of dance in me, and told me the career I now have even exists. But, more importantly, I learned from her and from ballet what it meant to work hard, with discipline and focus — and just how pleasurable it can be to work really hard,” Clare said.

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  • Fact Check: Claim that there’s ‘zero footage from the Ukraine war’ ignores countless photos and videos

    As Russia’s war in Ukraine raged on, a different conflict erupted more than 1,200 miles away in Israel and Gaza.

    Social media users quickly drew comparisons between the wars, but some didn’t get the facts right.

    An Oct. 9 Instagram post claimed images and videos of the Russia-Ukraine war, which began in February 2022, were being withheld.

    (Screengrab from Instagram)

    “Anybody else find it funny that Israel was attacked less than 48 hours ago and already we have hundreds of hours worth of footage but zero footage from the Ukraine war,” the post said.

    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.)

    The devastation from the Russia-Ukraine war has been well documented. There are hundreds of legitimate photos and videos depicting war casualties and decimated communities.

    Some photos and videos have been documented by news media; other footage has been taken by Ukrainian civilians whose lives were upended by Russia’s invasion.

    Even after Israel declared war Oct. 8, one day after Hamas’ attack, news outlets continued to cover and share photos of the Russia-Ukraine war.

    We rate the claim that there is “zero footage of the Ukraine war” Pants on Fire!



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  • Cancer is always a hard journey

    Cancer is always a hard journey

    Published 7:30 am Saturday, October 14, 2023

    I venture to say hearing the word cancer is one of the most dreaded words to hear today.

    Vickie Wacaster, Patient and Hospice Advocate with Aveanna Hospice (formerly Comfort Care Hospice)

    Our lives have forever changed for those of us who have been touched by cancer, either directly or indirectly. Cancer is not selective. It invades people of all faiths and nationalities without social, economic, or geographical restrictions. It plagues people who have always taken care of themselves – ate the right foods, exercised, and lived right as well as those who have abused their bodies from an early age. It affects the rich, the poor, the old and the young.

    October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, and although breast cancer is much more common in women, it can also affect men. According to the CDC, about 1 in every 100 breast cancers that are diagnosed in the United States will be found in men. Fortunately, around 64 percent of diagnosed breast cancers cases are discovered at a localized stage, which means before the cancer has spread. In those cases, the 5-year survival rate is 99 percent. In the year 2023, there are over 3.8 million breast cancer survivors in the United States. Though early diagnosis is key to long term survival, we continue to hope, and strive toward, a cure.

    Just as vaccinations for deadly diseases such as polio, tetanus, and smallpox have been discovered, and treatments to cure others like tuberculosis have been successful, we believe one day we will see a cure for breast cancer. With all the modern technology we have available in our world today, we continue to make strides towards complete cure; In the meantime, however, many new treatments have become available to target breast cancer with promising results. Above all, remember, cancer cannot rob you of your faith – it may test it-but it cannot destroy it – for we know that cancer cannot harm the soul.

    Above all, remember, cancer cannot rob you of your faith. It may test it, but it cannot destroy it, for we know that cancer cannot harm the soul. We pray that God will continue to touch the lives and hearts of our families and friends affected by any type of cancer.

    I want to leave you with two quotes that ring loud with truth:  “You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live.” – Stuart Scott, and the words of Dr. Gary Breslow, ”Don’t be afraid to ask for the help you need, whether it is an errand or a hand to hold – your friends and family really do want to help in any way they can.”

    — Vickie C. Wacaster is a patient and hospice advocate for Aveanna Hospice.

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  • Fact Check: Why do Americans have to pay for a State Department evacuation from Israel? It’s the law

    As thousands of Americans try to flee Israel amid a war, the State Department has offered U.S. citizens the opportunity to get a chartered flight — if they pay.

    Many commercial airlines canceled flights to and from Israel after it was attacked by Hamas, leaving tens of thousands of Americans in the country with few options to evacuate. Hundreds of Americans also are stuck in Gaza.

    The State Department said Oct. 12 that it would charter flights out of Israel to Europe, and the U.S. Embassy in Israel said citizens will be “asked to sign an agreement to repay the U.S. government prior to departure.”

    Critics of the Biden administration were angered that Americans will need to pay their own way.

    But Brian Krassenstein, a left-wing commentator, said Biden’s agencies are following a policy set decades ago. He responded to a critical X post with this message:

    “FACT Check: Conservatives are attacking Biden saying he’s requiring Americans Trapped in Israel, who want to leave, sign a promissory note to repay costs? FACTS: This has been US policy for at least 79 years!”

    Krassenstein said the promissory note policy, known as a form DS-5528, goes “back to at least 1944.”

    We researched the policy’s origins and found it predates Biden’s administration by decades. The policy was used in World War II and became law 67 years ago.

    At some points in history, American evacuees did not end up paying the transportation costs, but it’s unclear whether the requirement will be lifted for people leaving Israel now.

    U.S. law has required reimbursement since 1956

    We found a telegram Secretary of State Cordell Hull sent in August 1944 to the American Legion in Stockholm, Sweden, about Americans who had been evacuated.

    The telegram refers to 92 people and says adults “should be required to sign a promissory note” for the cost of transportation to Stockholm from Helsinki, Finland. It says children should be charged a half-fare.

    (Screenshot of telegram from Franklin D. Roosevelt Library)

    We could not determine when this policy started or why it became a law in 1956. The law requires U.S. citizens to reimburse the federal government for evacuation when their lives are endangered by war, civil unrest or natural disaster.

    The State Department website says people evacuated on U.S. government-coordinated transport must sign an Evacuee Manifest and Promissory Note (form DS-5528) before they leave.

    The form says the travelers know they will be billed for the cost. Payment is due within 30 days, but citizens can pay in installments, given State Department approval. 

    The State Department’s website explains, “U.S. law requires that departure assistance to private U.S. citizens or third country nationals be provided ‘on a reimbursable basis to the maximum extent practicable.’”

    The law has been cited, and sometimes waived, during many past overseas crises

    Searching news reports, we found multiple past examples of the law being cited. Sometimes, the repayment requirement was waived.

    • In 1989, the U.S. Embassy evacuated 282 Americans from El Salvador on chartered flights “after as many as nine U.S. officials and their families spent a harrowing night pinned in their homes by cross fire and rebel raids,” the Miami Herald reported. “The evacuation was the first in 10 years of civil war.” The embassy paid for flights of its staff and dependents, and asked other Americans to sign a $500 promissory note.

    • In 1990, a two-paragraph brief in the Los Angeles Times said the U.S. government would pay the costs of evacuating American citizens from Iraq and Kuwait. An unnamed government official told the Times that some officials may have asked evacuees to sign promissory notes covering airfares, but that was contrary to the George H.W. Bush administration’s policy.

    • In July 2006, when the State Department was evacuating U.S. citizens out of Lebanon, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Sen. John Sununu, R-N.H., called on the State Department to not charge U.S. citizens. The department dropped plans to seek reimbursement.

    • In February 2011 amid a revolt in Libya, the American embassy in Libya used a ferry to evacuate Americans to Malta. Reports by CNN and The Associated Press said the evacuees would be required to reimburse the government.

    • In 2021, the State Department initially said it would charge U.S. citizens $2,000 to evacuate from Afghanistan, but it backtracked.

    During the COVID-19 pandemic’s early months, some lawmakers introduced legislation seeking to amend the law. Some bills called for waiving the reimbursement requirement if it was related to COVID-19. The bills did not reach a vote.

    PolitiFact asked the White House whether the Biden administration is considering lifting the requirement for reimbursement but received no immediate response. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby announced plans Oct. 12 to have chartered flights but did not share any details. 

    CBS reported that flights would begin Oct. 13 from Tel Aviv to Athens, Greece, or Frankfurt, Germany, and ships would leave Haifa, Israel, and travel to Cyprus. 

    Our ruling

    Krassenstein said it “has been US policy for at least 79 years” to require Americans who intend to be evacuated from overseas to sign a promissory note.

    In August 1944, a telegram from the U.S. secretary of state said American adults who had been evacuated in Europe during World War II “should be required to sign a promissory note” for the cost of transportation. This policy became law in 1956.

    The 1956 law has been cited for decades when Republican and Democratic administrations have evacuated Americans during war or conflicts.

    We rate this statement True.

    PolitiFact researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

    RELATED: Read all of our Israel-Gaza coverage



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  • N.J. woman accused of stabbing 5-year-old granddaughter several times

    PATERSON, N.J. (TCD) — A 51-year-old woman is being charged after she allegedly stabbed her young granddaughter multiple times, injuring her.

    On Oct. 11, Paterson Police Department officers were called to Carroll Street and Godwin Avenue for a report of a stabbing and found a wounded 5-year-old girl when they arrived.

    The Passaic County District Attorney’s Office said police arrested the child’s grandmother, Aurora Villacorta, for allegedly stabbing the child.

    The Passaic County District Attorney’s Office announced Thursday, Oct. 12, that they are charging Villacorta with second-degree aggravated assault, third-degree aggravated assault, fourth-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, third-degree possession of a weapon or an unlawful purpose, and second-degree endangering the welfare of a child.

    Paterson Mayor Andre Sayegh told NJ.com, “It looks like the child is going to survive.”

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  • Fact Check: Cargo plane that evacuated people from Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2021 is real, not a decoy

    In August 2021, hundreds of people desperate to be evacuated from Afghanistan ran alongside a moving U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane at the international airport in Kabul as the Taliban took control there. 

    A recent Facebook post rehashes an old unfounded conspiracy theory that the plane was fake. 

    In the video, the narrator points out how the windows and plane engines appear “blacked out.” 

    “This is what a C-17 that’s not an inflatable looks like,” the person says. “See the windows clearly. See the engines clearly.”

    An image of the aircraft appears with the label: “Inflatable decoy plane.”

    But there’s no evidence to support this claim. 

    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.)

    The footage of people running alongside the plane and clinging to it was shared Aug. 16, 2021, on X by an Afghan journalist. News outlets such as The Washington Post picked it up and published it. 

    Air Force officials have said the plane is real, and from the 62nd Airlift Wing at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state. 

    Further evidence that the plane is real: Human remains were discovered in the plane’s wheel well after the plane’s crew struggled to close the landing gear. The U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations investigated the incident and determined the crew “acted appropriately” under the circumstances, The Hill reported. The office released the remains to local police. 

    We rate claims that this plane was an inflatable decoy False.

     



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