Is ‘Maskne’ a Sign of a Lung Infection?
Flailing conspiracy theorists’ latest attempt to gin up paranoia around face coverings involved skin rashes.
Flailing conspiracy theorists’ latest attempt to gin up paranoia around face coverings involved skin rashes.
Dubious and dated stats about missing children spread in August 2020, among them that 2,000 children go missing in the United States every day.
A surge of interest in child trafficking and the restricted #savethechildren hashtag isn’t organic — it was a subset of COVID-19 conspiracy theories in the summer of 2020.
A video of Oprah Winfrey apparently expressing support for child molestation is misleadingly edited.
At first glance, it looked like an overwhelming number of municipalities reported the oddly specific number of 322 COVID-19 cases — which unsurprisingly led to conspiracy theories.
A viral tweet and post attempted to prove that the media had “hyped” the threat of COVID-19 by donning protective gear when clearly none was necessary.
Viral tweets supposedly showed the President of the United States tweeting the lyrics to the 1983 hit “Break My Stride,” amounting to what was in actuality misaligned meme transference.
A since-suspended Twitter account published a historically impossible photograph.
A massively popular social media post contained the claim that children’s bones and skulls were unearthed on Jeffrey Epstein’s private island, a detail unreported by the media.
The days following a September 27th, 2018 hearing before the United States Senate Judiciary Committee, in which Palo Alto University professor and Stanford research psychologist Dr. Christine Blasey Ford testified that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh violently assaulted her during a party more than three decades before, swirled with increasingly bizarre stories about a grand conspiracy. …
The ‘Amy Schumer Is Actually Christine Blasey Ford’ Conspiracy Theory Read More »