Was a Man Arrested for Allegedly Forcing a Woman to Watch ‘Roots’ to ‘Better Understand’ Her Racism?
Sometimes stories sound fabricated, but this claim falls into the category of “stranger than fiction.”
Sometimes stories sound fabricated, but this claim falls into the category of “stranger than fiction.”
Viral social media posts promising a specific form of help during emergencies can, if inaccurate, pose a greater risk to 999 (or 911) callers.
A February 2020 tweet about a $50,000 wage earner paying $36 in tax toward food stamps and $4,000 for corporate subsidies has been circulating for years. Is it true?
The sign was attributed to a New Jersey man with a long history of mocking the president from his home.
The British explorer met a violent demise on Valentine’s Day in 1779.
“Bezos math” once again circulated on social media, when the Amazon chief executive officer’s $165 million house purchase was placed in purported terms of a $60,000-a-year wage earner.
The cause of former chief financial officer Joy Covey’s death was reported in December 2019, years after her passing.
A resolution purportedly aimed to label the two organizations as “fake” carried no financial penalties, nor would it have any effect on distribution of their news stories.
A video post involving the New York City mayor turned Democratic presidential candidate and stop-and-frisk alongside a request to “brainstorm ways” to downplay racism was real, but possibly not sincere.
The legal fight over the state’s 2013 voter ID law continued in February 2020.