Congressman Steve King Defends Dog Fighting, Animal Cruelty-Truth! & Fiction!
Congressman Steve King made controversial remarks about dogfighting in 2012, but he didn’t necessarily say it should be legal.
Congressman Steve King made controversial remarks about dogfighting in 2012, but he didn’t necessarily say it should be legal.
Claims made in “A Letter from an American Working in Mexico” about Mexico’s immigration documentation requirements are both true and outdated.
Conservative columnist Paul Sperry penned a column claiming that President Obama is scheming to sabotage President Trump at every turn.
Coretta Scott King acknowledged then-Senator Jeff Sessions in a 2000 speech — but claims that King “thanked” Sessions are false.
Dr. Ben Carson’s essay on Muslims, which has been in widespread circulation since 2001, was not actually written by Ben Carson.
A clickbait article spread false reports that President Trump had made English the official language of the United States.
Any early design for the Statue of Liberty featured an Arab peasant woman — but the inspiration for both designs was the Colossus of Rhodes.
Claims that President Trump plans to remove the Statue of Liberty and return it to France began as satire and were later misinterpreted.
Canadian Minister of National Defense Gordon O’Connor didn’t write a letter about an Adopt a Terrorist program, which never existed.
Dangerously high radiation levels were detected at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor in 2017 — but it wasn’t falling into the ocean.