Trump Executive Order Leads to Capture of ISIS Leader at JFK Airport-Fiction!
Reports that President Trump’s executive order led to the arrest of an ISIS leader at JFK Airport are completely fictional.
Reports that President Trump’s executive order led to the arrest of an ISIS leader at JFK Airport are completely fictional.
Claims that more than 800,000 non-citizens voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016 were based on a 2014 study that made disputable findings.
A small child was detained at Dulles Airport for several hours without his mother — but a photo of a small child handcuffed in a chair is unrelated to that.
Comparisons to a six-month initiative in 2011 was just one more bit of Trump disinformation.
Mary Anne Macleod wasn’t an illegal immigrant — but popular accounts of Macleod’s immigration to the U.S. also appear to be false.
Starbucks has pledged to hire 10,000 refugees to work in coffeehouses in 75 countries around the world — not 10,000 refugees to work in America.
The disingenuous memes that foreshadowed disinformation about ‘migrant caravans.’
A notoriously sketchy blog pushed another “tin foil hat” conspiracy theory with a January 2017 claim, elements of which were echoed in 2021 anti-vaccine disinformation campaigns.
Madonna said she’d thought about blowing up the White House, but claims that she’s under investigation for it are unfounded.
Vice President Mike Pence didn’t say he was disappointed in husbands and fathers for letting the WOmen’s March happen; that rumor was based on satire.