Socialist Takeover Must be Stopped
This is a forwarded email with a news article calling for the impeachment for Barack Obama for engaging in in “numerous high crimes and misdemeanors.”
This is a forwarded email with a news article calling for the impeachment for Barack Obama for engaging in in “numerous high crimes and misdemeanors.”
In baskets are being flooded with notifications from the instant messaging service WhatsApp that there is a voice message waiting.
Michigan state unversity professor Indrek Wichman’s protest of Islam after Moslem students protested the publishing of a cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammed as a terrorist.
This is an article that said that William Hung, who became an unlikely star because of the American Idol television show, died of an intentional overdose of heroin.
A forward email titled “No He Can’t” by an associate professor of sociology at Illinois State University, Anne Wortham Ph.D. that says that although she is black and grew up in the segregated South she did not vote for Obama nor is she celebrating his election to the presidency.
Various warnings to count your change when you shop at WalMart have circulated the Internet alleging that clerks are stealing change from customers who use ATM debit cards to pay for transactions.
This is a forwarded email that contains an article about the rescue of Captain Phillips by U.S. Navy Seals allegedly written by Dr. Jack Wheeler. Phillips and his crew of the container ship Maersk Alabama were being held hostage by Somali pirates.
An forwarded email with examples of untimely deaths of people who mocked God. The email quotes Galatians 6:7 and lists a group of people who all mocked God and died. The first example is of former Beatle John Lennon who said that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus. Also included in the list are Marilyn Monroe, a Brazilian president elect, a Brazilian singer and the man who built the RMS Titanic.
Warning about an email said to be from UPS but that has an attachment that contains a virus.
A Texas facility was the setting for one of two false claims from disinformation purveyor Todd Starnes.