Did Trump Call Sean Hannity and Tell People with Coronavirus to Go to Work Anyway?
United States President Donald Trump did not tell people watching talk show host Sean Hannity that if they contracted COVID-19 they should “go to work.”
United States President Donald Trump did not tell people watching talk show host Sean Hannity that if they contracted COVID-19 they should “go to work.”
The “advice” in a chain letter-styled post circulating online is far from reliable.
Pundits and blogs expressed outrage about a late-term abortion bill getting voted down.
Outlandish “surveys” (like one claiming that a large portions of Americans won’t drink Corona beer because of coronavirus fears) get repeated verbatim by outlets like CNN, giving free press to public relations firms.
According to the talk show host, a global outbreak of novel coronavirus is simply a plot to slander United States President Donald Trump.
A long-circulating image purportedly shows the House Speaker and California Congresswoman unwittingly posing with a Trump 2020 sign.
A anti-abortion group’s claim drew increased scrutiny online in February 2020.
The political ad takes aim at Democratic candidate Joe Biden prior to the state’s Democratic caucuses.
A Facebook post supposedly shows “pipeline protesters” who ran out of gas on their way to protest.
A right-wing commentator invoked the former president’s record to cast Democratic Party presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Michael Bloomberg candidates as racist.