Was an Oregon Police Officer Caught Telling an Armed Man How to Avoid Curfew?
Footage of the encounter in Salem spread from a live broadcast across virtually all social media.
Footage of the encounter in Salem spread from a live broadcast across virtually all social media.
On Facebook and Twitter, “Journalist Excellence Worldwide” pages are racking up rage-bait engagement — while simultaneously spreading white supremacist and neo-Nazi dogwhistles.
After deadly shrapnel killed a woman at a “gender reveal party,” a popular Facebook post claimed that such parties killed “more people than antifa.”
A viral post is making the usual rounds, but it has little context to support its description.
Dueling protests became dueling narratives in Portland, Oregon on June 29 2019 when clashes erupted between Proud Boys attendees and anti-fascist demonstrators, quickly devolving into rumors that milkshakes thrown at one person contained one or more damaging or caustic substances — including quick-dry concrete, quicklime, and caustic chemicals. Rumors to that effect were spread by the verified Portland …
On April 29 2019, an image of a purported notice from the City of Atlanta urging residents “not to” dump trash on white supremacists’ lawns went viral: Although the above version was popular, other anti-fascist Twitter accounts shared the image — including at least one in Atlanta: An image of the poster also appeared on …
Is Atlanta Urging People ‘Not to Dump Trash on White Supremacists’ Lawns’? Read More »
How Alex Jones and his ilk helped turn anti-fascists into a convenient far-right boogeyman.
False claims that chilling items found in Las Vega shooter Stephen Paddock’s room link him to President Obama are based on a series of fabricated reports.
A man falsely reported that he was stabbed by an Antifa member for having a neo-Nazi haircut and was later charged with filing a false report.
How an August 2017 disinformation campaign showed the spread of online extremism.