Does the NYPD Have a Slave Master With a Whip on Its Logo?
Numerous social media posts zeroed in on a portion of the purported New York Police Department logo which appeared to show a man holding a whip.
Numerous social media posts zeroed in on a portion of the purported New York Police Department logo which appeared to show a man holding a whip.
“This is the streets talking for themselves, they don’t need me right now,” Chappelle said.
An inaccurate and misleading (but viral) post about a shattered military bench in Florida falsely linked the broken monument to June 2020 protests over the death of George Floyd.
A tweet shared to Facebook drove interest in the “Wilmington Massacre,” during which black journalists were murdered in North Carolina.
Of course there’s no baby in that window. (We kid, we kid.)
An allegedly “targeted individual” used a satirical group’s joke to regurgitate a right-wing boogeyman.
When it seemed that the World Health Organization had declared that asymptomatic spread of COVID-19 was a “rare” issue, the claim predictably spread like wildfire — but, as usual, the clarification didn’t.
The ACLU says that local officials provided them with misleading information about Ordinance 11746.
BabyNames.com published a moving message in support of Black Lives Matter, which quickly went viral and caused server issues.