Chattanooga Times Free Press

NOT REAL NEWS

A LOOK AT WHAT DIDN’T HAPPEN THIS WEEK

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Editor’s Note: This is 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:

THE CLAIM: A copy of Vice President Kamala Harris’ book is being given to every migrant child in a Long Beach facility housing unaccompan­ied minors who recently arrived at the border.

THE FACTS: The New York Post published a story falsely claiming migrant children were each receiving welcome kits with copies of Harris’ children’s book, “Superheroe­s Are Everywhere.”

The misinforma­tion was picked up by other media outlets and spread quickly on social media.

“White House Denies Knowing Anything about Kamala Harris’ Book Ending Up in Welcome Bags For Illegal Migrant Children in California,” reads the headline of an article by DJHJ Media shared on Facebook.

A video echoing the false claim shared thousands of times on Facebook includes the caption, “IS KAMALA CASHING IN ON BOOKS AT THE BORDER?”

In fact, Kevin Lee, chief public affairs officer for the city of Long Beach, said a sole copy of Harris’ book was donated to the Long Beach Convention & Entertainm­ent Center, which opened last week as an emergency influx facility for children who arrive at the border without their parents.

At an April 22 media tour, a Reuters photograph­er snapped a photo of Harris’ book resting on a cot next to a black backpack, a purple blanket, and a set of toiletries. “The City of Long Beach, in partnershi­p with the Long Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau, has a citywide book and toy drive that is ongoing to support the migrant children who are temporaril­y staying in Long Beach at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services shelter,” Lee said.

“The single book you reference is one of hundreds of various books that have already been donated. The book was not purchased by HHS or the city.” Lee also clarified the children “do not receive a welcome kit.” Nor do they receive books.

They do get hygiene items and clothes, and can read books and play with toys that are part of the donated inventory, according to Lee.

Sabrina Singh, deputy press secretary to the vice president, said, “The Office of the Vice President was not aware that her children’s book was donated.”

On Tuesday, the New York Post updated two stories to reflect there was only one donated copy of Harris’ book. The reporter who wrote the original article, Laura Italiano, resigned. In a tweet, Italiano referred to the article as “an incorrect story that I was ordered to write and which I failed to push back hard enough against.”

THE CLAIM: A recount of ballots from Arizona’s Maricopa County in the November election discovered a quarter of a million illegal votes by Monday.

THE FACTS: No results from the audit, which was ordered by Republican­s in Arizona’s state Senate, have been released.

Legislator­s initiated the audit of 2.1 million ballots cast in the state’s most populous county during the November election even though multiple lawsuits and audits found no widespread irregulari­ties.

On Friday, Cyber Ninjas, a cyber security firm contracted by the Senate, began the audit. Cyber Ninjas is run by a supporter of former President Donald Trump who has shared unfounded claims Biden’s presidenti­al win was illegitima­te.

The audit is expected to take about three weeks to complete, and the company has reserved the Veterans

Memorial Coliseum at the state fairground­s through May 14 to do the recount.

On Monday, claims began circulatin­g on social media falsely suggesting the results of the audit were known.

One popular social media post with over 1,500 shares says, “A QUARTER OF A MILLION ILLEGAL VOTES FOUND IN ARIZONA AUDIT…SO FAR!”

But the results of the audit, which began Friday, haven’t been released. Ken Bennet, a former Arizona secretary of state acting as the Senate’s liaison to the recount, confirmed the claim is false. When asked Monday if auditors had found 250,000 illegal votes, Bennett said “No.”

The Senate audit can’t overturn the results of the election, but Republican­s who control the state Senate say it’s needed to restore voter confidence and help them craft changes to state election laws.

Senate Democrats call the audit an effort to perpetuate false claims of voter fraud in the election. Experts on election administra­tion and security have expressed alarm at the Senate’s audit, which they say isn’t following standard procedures to transparen­tly and accurately count votes.

Biden won Arizona by nearly 10,500 votes and won Maricopa County by just over 45,100 votes.

THE CLAIM: President Joe Biden’s plan to combat climate change will require Americans to reduce their meat consumptio­n by 90%, to just 4 pounds of red meat annually or one hamburger per month.

THE FACTS: Biden isn’t coming for your Fourth of July barbecue, despite a flurry of posts suggesting as much on social media.

Over the weekend, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called the president the “Hamburglar,” while Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert warned Biden to “stay out of my kitchen,” and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott wrote meat restrictio­ns were “not gonna happen in Texas!”

However, Biden’s climate plans have never included those metrics, nor has the president announced any policy restrictin­g meat in American diets.

The falsehoods began April 22, when Biden opened an online climate summit by announcing his goal to cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions at least in half by 2030. Biden briefly hinted at some initiative­s to help reach the ambitious goal, but didn’t mention red meat.

The same day, the British tabloid The Daily Mail published a speculativ­e story that suggested “Biden’s climate plan could limit you to eat just one burger a MONTH.”

As evidence, the outlet cited a January University of Michigan study unrelated to Biden that looked at various U.S. diet scenarios and their environmen­tal impact.

Fox News falsely linked the study to Biden’s climate policies, stating in on-air discussion­s achieving Biden’s climate goals would require Americans to cut red meat by 90% and eat just “one burger per month.”

The University of Michigan study didn’t mention Biden, nor did it reference any forthcomin­g government policies restrictin­g meat consumptio­n.

Instead, it explored various hypothetic­al reductions in animal-based foods in the U.S. diet and concluded they could reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Fox News anchor John Roberts clarified the network’s reporting Monday, saying the data from the University of Michigan study was accurate, “but a graphic and the script incorrectl­y implied it was part of Biden’s plan for dealing with climate change. That is not the case.”

The Britain-based Daily Mail defended its reporting, arguing its story was an attempt to fill a gap in details on how Biden planned to achieve such an ambitious emission reduction target.

THE CLAIM: The covid-19 vaccine is “shedding” from person to person. As a result, unvaccinat­ed people who are in close proximity to vaccinated people are having changes in their period or miscarriag­es.

THE FACTS: A false conspiracy theory circulated on social media suggesting people who haven’t been vaccinated against covid-19 can experience changes in their cycle or miscarriag­es, solely by being physically close to a person who received the vaccine.

On Tuesday, The Associated Press reported on a private school in Miami warning teachers and staff against taking the covid-19 vaccine, citing the baseless theory.

One false Instagram post accused vaccinated people of “negatively impacting women’s menstrual cycles” and falsely claimed that miscarriag­es were “up 400%.”

Multiple social media posts referred to the baseless theory as a form of “shedding,” including an Instagram post that inaccurate­ly blamed “extended or extremely heavy cycles” on “being around people who are recently vaccinated and shedding.”

Dr. Jen Gunter, an obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st and author, said the vaccine cannot be shed, nor is it infectious. “It is not biological­ly possible for the vaccine to do that,” Gunter said.

The false posts weaved together multiple debunked theories, such as period syncing, Gunter noted. Period syncing is a popular belief women who are in close proximity to one another can have their periods align. “I think this represents a gross misunderst­anding of the menstrual cycle. This ties into the myth of period syncing, which is not a thing,” Gunter said.

“We don’t give off auras that affect other people’s menstrual cycles.” Some women have reported a fluctuatio­n in their menstrual cycle after receiving the covid-19 vaccine, but so far the reports have been anecdotal.

Experts are still determinin­g whether those fluctuatio­ns may be linked to stress or immune reactions people have after getting a vaccine. “When you mount a very robust immune response, that can release hormones that change your menstrual cycle,” said Dr. Andrea L. Cox, professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, noting the change shouldn’t be longterm.

Either way, irregular periods can’t be spread from person to person. Covid-19 vaccines don’t affect fertility or cause miscarriag­es, data shows.

“Not only do they not cause miscarriag­es in the people who are near vaccinated people, they do not even cause miscarriag­es in the people who got them during pregnancy,” Cox said.

Last week, new data was published in the New England Journal of Medicine by researcher­s at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, bolstering evidence covid-19 vaccines are safe and do not cause miscarriag­es.

The results are based on reports from over 35,000 U.S. women who received either the Moderna or Pfizer shots while pregnant. The rates of miscarriag­es or premature births were comparable to rates reported before the pandemic.

THE CLAIM: Pfizer warns people not to have unprotecte­d sex after the second covid-19 vaccine dose for up to 28 days because of the risk of “birth defects due to genetic manipulati­on.”

THE FACTS: A TikTok video claiming the Pfizer vaccine can cause birth defects resurfaced this week after a large study was published last week and provided further evidence the covid-19 vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna are safe for pregnant women.

The false claim began circulatin­g in December.

“Page 132 of Pfizer vaccine..basically says no unprotecte­d sex up to 28 days after 2nd dose due to reproducti­ve safety risk..this is for males and females..births defects due to genetic manipulati­on,” text in the video falsely states.

Posts claiming the covid-19 vaccine can alter DNA have been debunked. The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion granted emergency authorizat­ion for Pfizer’s covid-19 vaccine in December. Before that, the vaccine was tested in clinical trials that excluded pregnant women.

Page 132 of a Pfizer protocol document instructs clinical trial participan­ts to take measures to avoid becoming pregnant or getting someone pregnant “for a minimum of 28 days after the last dose of study interventi­on.”

Pfizer began testing the covid-19 vaccine on pregnant women in February.

Medication­s and vaccines are typically tested first in young, healthy people who aren’t pregnant or at risk of getting pregnant, said Dr. Andrea L. Cox, a professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Once proven to be safe among healthy adults who are not pregnant, drugs and vaccines can be tested on pregnant people, children and more vulnerable population­s.

“Whenever clinical trials are run and usually, again, no matter what you’re testing, there is a higher safety bar set for pregnant people because it’s key that we know something before we put a developing, potentiall­y a developing fetus at risk as well as the pregnant woman,” Cox said.

Dr. Arnold Monto, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, said there was nothing unusual about Pfizer’s instructio­ns to clinical trial participan­ts. “I think the wording on contracept­ion is pretty typical of an early study when you are being cautious,” Monto said.

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THE CLAIM: The Chicago Police Department tweeted, “We are all Derek Chauvin.”

THE FACTS: Social media users shared a fabricated screenshot last weekend that purported to show the Chicago Police Department openly taking a stand on Twitter in support of Derek Chauvin, who was convicted for the murder of George Floyd.

The fake tweet included a photo of Chauvin taken during his trial and was quickly shared online as if it was real.

Social media users circulated a screenshot of the fabricated tweet that said, “That’s what we have been saying this whole time.”

The Twitter account behind the retweet has a bio that reads, “If I tweet it, second guess it.”

The Chicago Police Department knocked down the false post on their official account and said they reported the incident to the social media platform.

On Monday, the department said the manipulate­d image went against their values. “Not only does this synthetic and manipulate­d image, which is antithetic­al to our values, reflect the very worst of disinforma­tion on social media, it also puts our officers & communitie­s at risk by widening the gap in trust that we are working so hard to build, bridge & restore,” reads a tweet from the department.

Floyd’s death sparked internatio­nal outrage and nationwide protests against police brutality after a video circulated showing Chauvin pinning Floyd to the pavement with a knee to his neck. Chauvin was convicted in Floyd’s death on April 20.

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THE CLAIM: The Washington Post has ended fact-checking for President Joe Biden for the remainder of his presidency.

THE FACTS: A post circulatin­g widely on Facebook this week featured a picture of Biden overlaid with the inaccurate text, “WASHINGTON POST ENDS FACT CHECKING FOR BIDEN FOR THE REMAINDER OF HIS PRESIDENCY.”

But Biden won’t be escaping the Post’s dreaded Pinocchios.

These claims misreprese­nt Kessler’s Monday announceme­nt the Post will stop maintainin­g its presidenti­al fact-checking database after Biden’s first 100 days because of the labor and hours it requires.

The database is a list of fact checks of presidenti­al statements that can be filtered by topic or source.

The Post reports it has analyzed “every speech, interview, tweet or public statement made by the president” in Biden’s first 100 days.

Every claim that “would receive two or more Pinocchios on the Fact Checker scale” — or that included “significan­t omissions and/ or exaggerati­ons” at minimum — was included in the database.

“Maintainin­g the Trump database over four years required about 400 additional 8-hour days over four years beyond our regular jobs for three people,” Kessler wrote on Twitter.

“Biden is off to a relatively slow start but who knows what will happen. We will keep doing fact checks, just not a database.”

Shani George, vice president of communicat­ions for the Washington Post, sent The Associated Press a statement echoing Kessler’s point. “We took on the task of maintainin­g a database during the previous presidency in response to unique circumstan­ces. That database started as a 100-day project, and we created a companion project for the current president so a comparison could be made,” the statement read.

“We are continuing our practice of rigorous, routine fact-checking, which has already identified dozens of false and misleading statements by Biden, and will continue to hold the president accountabl­e for his words.”

To that end, on Wednesday, the team released a fact check of Biden’s address to a joint session of Congress.

 ?? (File Photo/The Arizona Republic/Rob Schumacher) ?? Maricopa County ballots cast in the 2020 general election are examined and recounted Thursday by contractor­s working for the Florida-based company Cyber Ninjas, hired by the Arizona State Senate at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y asserting a recount of ballots from Arizona’s Maricopa County in the November election discovered a quarter of a million illegal votes so far.
(File Photo/The Arizona Republic/Rob Schumacher) Maricopa County ballots cast in the 2020 general election are examined and recounted Thursday by contractor­s working for the Florida-based company Cyber Ninjas, hired by the Arizona State Senate at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y asserting a recount of ballots from Arizona’s Maricopa County in the November election discovered a quarter of a million illegal votes so far.
 ??  ?? Then Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., speaks at George Washington University in Washington in January 2019. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y asserting that a copy of Harris’ children’s book, “Superheroe­s Are Everywhere,” is being given to every migrant child in a Long Beach, Calif., facility housing unaccompan­ied minors who recently arrived at the border. (File Photo/AP/Sait Serkan Gurbuz)
Then Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., speaks at George Washington University in Washington in January 2019. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y asserting that a copy of Harris’ children’s book, “Superheroe­s Are Everywhere,” is being given to every migrant child in a Long Beach, Calif., facility housing unaccompan­ied minors who recently arrived at the border. (File Photo/AP/Sait Serkan Gurbuz)
 ??  ?? Former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin listens April 20 as the verdict is read in his trial for the 2020 death of George Floyd at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapoli­s. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on social media posts sharing a fabricated screenshot last weekend that purported to show the Chicago Police Department tweeting in support of Chauvin, who was convicted for the murder of Floyd. The department sent no such tweet. (File Photo/Court TV)
Former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin listens April 20 as the verdict is read in his trial for the 2020 death of George Floyd at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapoli­s. On Friday, The Associated Press reported on social media posts sharing a fabricated screenshot last weekend that purported to show the Chicago Police Department tweeting in support of Chauvin, who was convicted for the murder of Floyd. The department sent no such tweet. (File Photo/Court TV)

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