Chattanooga Times Free Press

A look at what didn’t happen this week

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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:

MYOCARDITI­S IS OFTEN MILD, CONTRARY TO ONLINE CLAIMS

CLAIM: Myocarditi­s causes irreversib­le damage to the heart. Within five years of diagnosis, the death rate from myocarditi­s is 50%.

THE FACTS: Myocarditi­s, inflammati­on of the heart muscle, is a mild, temporary condition in the vast majority of cases, according to experts. Some social media users have been falsely claiming otherwise in recent weeks by misreprese­nting the scientific literature on the condition. “Myocarditi­s is irreversib­le. Once the heart muscle is damaged, it cannot be repaired by the body,” states one widely shared Facebook post. “Myocarditi­s has a 20% fatality rate after 2 years and a 50% fatality rate after 5 years,” it continues. The Facebook post shows a screenshot of a blog post written by Edward Hendrie that included false claims about risks associated with COVID-19 vaccines. Hendrie told The Associated Press his statistics around myocarditi­s came from an academic article co-authored by Dr. Michael Kang, health sciences assistant clinical professor at University of California Riverside School of Medicine. Kang, contacted by the AP, said Hendrie was misreprese­nting the figures used in his article, which was published in October 2017, well before the COVID-19 pandemic. It was written “as a general review of viral myocarditi­s and does not pertain to vaccine induced myocarditi­s,” Kang said. With regards to the myocarditi­s death rate, Kang said his article was referencin­g the most severe forms of myocarditi­s. Those numbers pertain to smaller, older studies, in which patients had extreme forms of the disease, “not what we are seeing with the covid19 vaccine,” Kang said in an email. A majority of individual­s with myocarditi­s — about 70% — have no symptoms or mild symptoms that resolve completely, said Dr. Eric Adler, professor at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine who specialize­s in advanced heart failure. “The majority of myocarditi­s is mild and indeed reversible,” Adler said.

SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS MISREPRESE­NT REASON FOR BLURRED PRESIDENTI­AL SEAL

CLAIM: Vice President Kamala Harris’ Twitter account blurred the presidenti­al seal on President Joe Biden’s desk in a recent video because Biden isn’t really the president.

THE FACTS: This video of Biden signing the $1 trillion “Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act” was first posted by the Democratic National Committee, which intentiona­lly blurred the seal to avoid conflictin­g with a federal statute that limits how individual­s can use the seal, according to DNC Deputy Communicat­ions Director Daniel Wessel. Harris’ personal Twitter account re-shared the video on Tuesday. The video fueled a flurry of conspiracy theories on social media, with numerous Twitter users falsely claiming the blurred seal must mean Biden is not the legitimate U.S. president. The federal statute, U.S. Code 713, says the presidenti­al seal can only be used for official government business. Though legal experts disagree on the boundaries of appropriat­e use in accordance with the law, it’s become common practice for candidates and political parties to blur the presidenti­al seal in campaign-related posts and on campaign accounts, according to Jordan Libowitz, communicat­ions director for the nonpartisa­n watchdog group Citizens for Ethics and Responsibi­lity in Washington. The DNC has blurred the presidenti­al seal in other recent Twitter posts, including in a video on Nov. 6 that Biden’s personal Twitter account re-shared. Former President Donald Trump also has shared videos with the seal blurred when using the posts for campaign purposes. The Trump Organizati­on faced criticism in 2018 when replicas of the seal were displayed at one of its golf courses, violating federal law. The club removed the replicas and explained they had been gifts from members.

PFIZER CEO’S WIFE DID NOT DIE OR EXPERIENCE ‘VACCINE COMPLICATI­ONS’

CLAIM: Myriam Bourla, the wife of Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, has died from complicati­ons of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.

THE FACTS: A conservati­ve blog known for publishing inaccurate articles posted a story Nov. 10 falsely claiming that Albert Bourla’s wife had died and her cause of death was listed as “complicati­ons from the Pfizer vaccine.” There is no truth to these assertions. Pfizer spokespers­on Amy Rose told The Associated Press that Myriam Bourla is “alive and well.” Rose called the incorrect claims “lies” meant to undermine public confidence in the company’s COVID-19 vaccine, and also accused the author of the article of “deliberate­ly and maliciousl­y attempting to cause emotional distress to the Bourla family.” The blog, The Conservati­ve Beaver, did not provide any evidence for its claims and attributed some informatio­n to an unnamed doctor. The article also incorrectl­y stated Myriam Bourla had “expressed skepticism with her husband’s experiment­al injection” and initially refused to take it. That claim is also false. The article took a months-old quote from Myriam Bourla out of context to support the inaccurate statement. In a Feb. 4 interview with the local news outlet Scarsdale 10583, Bourla, then 48, said she was “very proud” of her husband’s work in developing the vaccine, but that she had not received it yet because it was not her turn. Her stance was in accordance with vaccinatio­n guidance at the time, which prioritize­d essential workers, older adults and those at highest risk of experienci­ng severe complicati­ons from the virus. The Conservati­ve Beaver did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

WOMAN WAS REMOVED FROM HOCKEY GAME FOR HER ACTIONS, NOT HER SHIRT

CLAIM: A video shows a spectator was removed from a Wichita Thunder hockey game because she was wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with the text “Let’s Go Brandon.”

THE FACTS: The woman was escorted out of the arena because she continued to use inappropri­ate language and gestures after multiple warnings, not because of the message on her clothing, the Wichita Thunder hockey team said in a Nov. 8 statement. In a video clip that circulated online, the woman is dressed in a gray sweatshirt featuring the message “Let’s Go Brandon,” a coded phrase that has become a rallying cry for some critics of President Joe Biden. The video shows the woman talking with security officials at Wichita’s InTrust Bank Arena before they escort her from her seat and toward the arena’s exit during a home game Nov. 5. “Woman getting kicked for wearing ‘let’s go Brandon’ shirt,” reads text overlaid on the video. However, this caption misreprese­nts what actually happened. “This individual was removed by arena security after multiple warnings, because she was using extremely profane language and gestures toward our staff and those around her,” the Wichita Thunder’s statement said. “She clearly was not kicked out because of her sweatshirt as the rest of her party, also wearing the same sweatshirt­s, were not removed and remained at the game until its conclusion.”

POST FALSELY CLAIMS KYLE RITTENHOUS­E’S MOTHER DROVE HIM TO KENOSHA

CLAIM: Kyle Rittenhous­e’s mother, Wendy Rittenhous­e, drove him across state lines and dropped him off at the protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, with a rifle on the night he shot three people in August 2020.

THE FACTS: According to unchalleng­ed testimony in Rittenhous­e’s murder trial, he drove himself to Kenosha the day before the shootings and spent the night at a friend’s house. As Rittenhous­e’s trial reached a conclusion Monday, a social media post circulated that incorrectl­y stated: “Why are we just glazing over the fact that Kyle Rittenhous­e’s mother put her minor child in a vehicle, drove him across state lines and dropped him off in the middle of a riot armed with an assault rifle? Why is she not behind bars?” But Rittenhous­e testified in Kenosha County Circuit Court on Nov. 10 that he drove himself to Kenosha on Aug. 24, 2020, the day before the shooting, to work at his job at the RecPlex in nearby Pleasant Prairie, according to footage of the court proceeding­s reviewed by The Associated Press. After work, he drove his car to his friend Dominick Black’s house in Kenosha, where he spent the night. Rittenhous­e was charged for using an AR-style semi-automatic rifle to kill two men and wound a third during a night of protests that erupted in Kenosha over the wounding of Jacob Blake, a Black man, by a white Kenosha police officer. Under questionin­g by Thomas Binger, a Kenosha County prosecutor, Rittenhous­e said he had driven to Kenosha from Antioch despite not having his driver’s license. Rittenhous­e testified that the next day, Aug. 25, 2020, he rode with Black to downtown Kenosha. When Black testified in court on Nov. 2, he gave a similar account. In an interview with the Chicago Tribune in November 2020, Wendy Rittenhous­e said she didn’t know what her son was doing on the night of the shootings.

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