Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NOT REAL NEWS

A LOOK AT WHAT DIDN’T HAPPEN THIS WEEK

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Editor’s Note: A roundup of some of the most popular but completely untrue stories and visuals of the week. None of these are legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associated Press checked them out. Here are the facts:

CLAIM: Medication abortions are dangerous, and result in high rates of infection and hemorrhage. Parts of the baby are also left in the womb following the procedure.

THE FACTS: Research shows that medication abortions, which involve taking pills to end a pregnancy, are safe and effective, experts say. Complicati­ons after abortions using pills, such as infection, are rare.

With a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that could overturn the landmark abortion law Roe v. Wade expected soon, a post containing false claims that medication abortions are dangerous has circulated widely online. The procedure, which typically occurs prior to 11 weeks, involves taking two medication­s, called mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l, in pill form to end a pregnancy.

“They are incredibly safe,” Emily Godfrey, an associate professor of family medicine and obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington, told the AP. “Less than 1% of people who have sought a medication abortion have had complicati­ons.”

Alison Edelman, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health & Science University, pointed to a 2018 report published by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine that found “complicati­ons after medication abortion, such as hemorrhage, hospitaliz­ation, persistent pain, infection or prolonged heavy bleeding, are rare—occurring in no more than a fraction of a percent of patients.”

The same report cited research finding that medication abortions have an “overall effectiven­ess rate of 96.7 percent for gestations up to 63 days (9 weeks).”

“Medication abortion is incredibly safe in terms of all of those things,” Edelman said. “The risk of infection is less than 1%, harm to internal organs is almost nonexisten­t, and bleeding risk is less than 1% as well.”

Some bleeding does occur as a result of medication abortion, which involves administer­ing misoprosto­l to induce uterine contractio­ns to expel the pregnancy from the uterus. However, the resulting bleeding is typically not serious.

“It’s unusual to have bleeding to the point of needing an emergency interventi­on,” Edelman said.

While tissue can remain in a patient’s uterus following a medication abortion, experts said, the procedure does not result in identifiab­le parts of a baby being left in the womb.

“Before nine weeks, really what you’re seeing is a gestationa­l sac,” Edelman said. “To have like an actual part of a baby left, would be, would be almost unheard of for a medical abortion process.”

She added that a fetus at nine weeks is around a centimeter in size and a fetus at 11 weeks is “probably a centimeter and a half to two centimeter­s.”

Godfrey said that prior to eight weeks, when many patients are seeking abortions, the pregnancy consists of an embryo, not a fetus.

“There is no baby there. The embryo is the size of a piece of rice. There is nothing to be left behind,” she said. “Arms don’t really develop until nine weeks of pregnancy. Again, they are millimeter­s in length.”

★★★

CLAIM: A drag performer flashed their genitals to children while reading aloud in a Minnesota library.

THE FACTS: The performer in this 2019 photograph was wearing several layers of nude tights, said Hennepin County Library Communicat­ions Manager Joshua Yetman.

“There wasn’t any exposure to children,” Yetman said.

As hateful and misleading rhetoric aimed at the LGBTQ community has escalated in recent months on social media, Drag Queen Story Hour events hosted by libraries or bookstores have become a frequent target.

This week, some social media users are resurrecti­ng a 2019 photo of such an event in a Minneapoli­s suburb and reposting it with false claims it shows the performer exposing their genitals to children. The image captures the performer, who is wearing a short dress while seated in front of students, reaching to the side for a book. In some versions of the post, a black box labeled “CENSORED” has been added to the space between the performer’s legs.

“This is literally a sex crime,” reads a June 10 tweet that was shared some 10,000 times.

“Adult flashes his penis to young children at library’s drag queen story hour,” another tweet read.

However, unedited versions of the image show that the performer was wearing opaque nude tights that covered their genitals, a fact that Yetman confirmed to the AP in a phone interview Monday.

“The performer was wearing tan or nude-colored tights, several layers of tights,” Yetman said. “They did not expose themselves to the children.”

Yetman said the photo was captured in October 2019 during a drag queen story hour program at Ridgedale Library in the Minneapoli­s suburb of Minnetonka. The image circulated online with the same false claims shortly after the program happened, and the library system debunked them at the time.

Yetman said the program finished its course in fall 2019 and hadn’t resumed during the pandemic. He said that while claims that a performer had flashed children generated a lot of conversati­on among library patrons, it wasn’t the reason that the program stopped running. He added that he didn’t know whether the library system would continue to offer similar programmin­g in the future.

“It will depend on what we hear from the community and what their interests are,” Yetman said.

Meanwhile, in the San Francisco Bay Area, authoritie­s are investigat­ing a possible hate crime after a group of men allegedly shouted anti-LGBTQ slurs during Drag Queen Story Hour at the San Lorenzo Library on June 11.

★★★

CLAIM: A headline states “UN Warns of Massive Refugee Movement from Africa: 500 Million People On Their Way to Europe.”

THE FACTS: The headline, made to look as if it were published by the New York Post on March 15, is fabricated. Social media users shared the doctored image to falsely claim the outlet reported that the U.N. warned of 500 million refugees set to arrive in Europe.

The fabricated image did not include the New York Post’s logo, but used the same typeface and the byline of a real Post reporter. The manufactur­ed image also used an existing Post article as a template, keeping the byline, date and timestamp of 1:11 a.m. in the same positions, but adding the fake headline and a photo of refugees traveling by boat over it.

The headline of the authentic March 15 article, which had nothing to do with migrants, read “Russia passes law to take control of foreign airplanes left in country.” Further, no such article referencin­g a U.N. statement on an imminent refugee movement from Africa exists in the New York Post’s online archives.

Two spokespeop­le confirmed to the AP that the image is manipulate­d.

“The Post never ran that story,” Post spokespers­on Iva Benson wrote in an email.

The informatio­n in the fabricated headline is also false. A spokespers­on for the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees, the U.N.’s refugee agency, told the AP that the office has not issued such a statement.

“There was no such official communicat­ion from UNHCR,” said Matthew Saltmarsh, a communicat­ions representa­tive overseeing the Middle East, North Africa and Libya.

There is no evidence of any such migration arriving in Europe since March, either. And 500 million refugees would make up about 35% of Africa’s total population, according to U.N. population statistics. Migration flow data from the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, a U.N. agency, shows that 50,630 refugees — from all countries — have arrived in Europe so far in 2022. The same data set shows that 151,417 refugees from around the world arrived in Europe total in 2021.

★★★

CLAIM: A photo shows actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson wearing a T-shirt with the phrase “Keep America Trumpless” on it.

THE FACTS: The image has been manipulate­d to add the message. The original photo, a promotiona­l still for a 2015 film, shows the actor wearing a shirt that reads “Los Angeles Fire Department.”

The edited photo, showing Johnson wearing a shirt printed with an American flag and the political slogan, began circulatin­g on social media earlier this year and has reemerged in recent days, with a version this week gaining more than 10,000 retweets. But the image has been altered.

The original image of Johnson can be found in a gallery of promotiona­l photos for the 2015 Warner Bros. film “San Andreas,” which shows the actor’s shirt actually reads “Los Angeles Fire Department.”

A spokespers­on for the studio confirmed to The Associated Press that the original image was a promotiona­l still for the film, in which Johnson plays a rescue helicopter pilot.

Other images in the gallery show Johnson walking next to other actors in similar shirts, all taken from a similar angle as the shot that was manipulate­d. Johnson endorsed President Joe Biden’s campaign in 2020. He has occasional­ly mused about launching his

own presidenti­al bid.

 ?? (File Photo/AP/San Francisco Chronicle/Gabrielle Lurie) ?? A child looks in the mirror Dec. 3, 2017, after getting makeup applied by Bay Area drag queen Panda Dulce (right) during an event called “We Are All Queens” in San Francisco. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim a drag performer flashed their genitals to children while reading aloud in a Minnesota library.
(File Photo/AP/San Francisco Chronicle/Gabrielle Lurie) A child looks in the mirror Dec. 3, 2017, after getting makeup applied by Bay Area drag queen Panda Dulce (right) during an event called “We Are All Queens” in San Francisco. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim a drag performer flashed their genitals to children while reading aloud in a Minnesota library.
 ?? ?? Migrants and refugees from Africa are assisted Jan. 28 at the rescue ship of the Spanish NGO Aita Mary after being rescued in the Mediterran­ean Sea, about 103 miles from the Libyan coast. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim the U.N. is warning of a massive refugee movement from Africa with 500 million on their way to Europe. (File Photo/AP/Pau de la Calle)
Migrants and refugees from Africa are assisted Jan. 28 at the rescue ship of the Spanish NGO Aita Mary after being rescued in the Mediterran­ean Sea, about 103 miles from the Libyan coast. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim the U.N. is warning of a massive refugee movement from Africa with 500 million on their way to Europe. (File Photo/AP/Pau de la Calle)
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Allen G. Breed) ?? Boxes of the drug mifepristo­ne line a shelf March 16 at the West Alabama Women’s Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala. The drug is one of two used together in “medication abortions.” Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim medication abortions are dangerous.
(File Photo/AP/Allen G. Breed) Boxes of the drug mifepristo­ne line a shelf March 16 at the West Alabama Women’s Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala. The drug is one of two used together in “medication abortions.” Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y claim medication abortions are dangerous.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Chris Pizzello) ?? Dwayne Johnson, a cast member in the upcoming film “Black Adam,” discusses the film April 26 during the Warner Bros. Pictures presentati­on at CinemaCon 2022 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. A photo circulatin­g online has been altered to show Johnson wearing a T-shirt with the phrase “Keep America Trumpless” on it.
(File Photo/AP/Chris Pizzello) Dwayne Johnson, a cast member in the upcoming film “Black Adam,” discusses the film April 26 during the Warner Bros. Pictures presentati­on at CinemaCon 2022 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. A photo circulatin­g online has been altered to show Johnson wearing a T-shirt with the phrase “Keep America Trumpless” on it.

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