Did the CDC Stop Disclosing How Many People Were Tested for Coronavirus in the United States?
Key statistics appear to have been either moved or removed from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s page tracking COVID-19.
Key statistics appear to have been either moved or removed from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s page tracking COVID-19.
A post to Imgur in February 2020 called “Tax brackets explained. Help educate others!” went viral on that site and elsewhere on social media.
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.
It’s true that the 1988 anime classic got the 2020 Olympics right, but the parts about a predicted coronavirus pandemic are exaggerated.
A social media user’s “add your kid as an authorized user” advice is way riskier than it looks; here’s why.
Mike Barnicle said that messaging from presidential candidate Bernie Sanders resonated with twentysomethings who were “doing okay.”
Yes, it’s real, and the poster was very popular on social media.
A lack of health experience was much more of a concern for the president before he ran for office.
A circulating meme suggests that the presidential hopeful said that rival candidate Bernie Sanders would have defeated Donald Trump in 2016, but “they gave the nomination to Hillary” Clinton.