Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NOT REAL NEWS

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:

CLAIM: $2.5 billion of American tax dollars has been allocated toward a welcoming center for immigrants coming to the country illegally.

THE FACTS: The conservati­ve blogging duo Diamond and Silk falsely claimed that American tax dollars are set to fund a multi-billion dollar welcoming center for immigrants arriving to the U.S. illegally.

“Shame on any Republican who’s working with the B!den regime to completely destroy the Infrastruc­ture of America,” the pair posted on Twitter and Facebook. “The 2.5 Billion allocated towards a ‘Welcoming Center for Illegal Aliens’ should be allocated towards LEGAL Americans only. After all, it is American tax dollars!”

It wasn’t clear to what the duo’s claim referred, but the closest match in federal legislatio­n is the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill approved by the Senate on Tuesday.

The Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act gives the General Services Administra­tion about $3.4 billion for “constructi­on and acquisitio­n, and repairs and alteration­s of border stations and land ports of entry,” with $2.5 billion of that going toward items in U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s five-year plan. CBP confirmed these projects did not include any “welcoming center.”

CBP sent the AP a statement noting, “There is no truth to that rumor.” Instead, the bill funds a range of infrastruc­ture improvemen­t projects at land ports of entry, including repairs, expansion and modernizat­ion of border facilities that, in some cases, have not been updated in decades.

A bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers from Arizona last week urged congressio­nal leaders to support the funding for land port of entry projects. They wrote in a letter that fixing the aging infrastruc­ture at Arizona facilities would help the U.S. maintain trade with Mexico, crack down on the transport of illegal substances and accommodat­e border traffic.

Diamond and Silk told the AP they never claimed the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill provided funding for a welcoming center, but did not immediatel­y respond to a request to identify another basis for their claim. — ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ALI SWENSON IN NEW YORK CONTRIBUTE­D THIS REPORT WITH ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER JUDE JOFFE-BLOCK IN PHOENIX

★★★

CLAIM: A covid-19 PCR test recently recalled for having too many false positive results was the only covid-19 test available last spring, so its false results exaggerate­d the scope of the pandemic and fooled Americans into losing their businesses and their livelihood­s.

THE FACTS: The recently recalled covid-19 test featured in a widely shared video on Instagram and TikTok is a rapid antigen test, not a PCR test, and it was not the only test in use last spring. In fact, it was never authorized by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for commercial distributi­on.

The video falsely suggests that Innova Medical Group’s recall of its own test is evidence the coronaviru­s pandemic is exaggerate­d.

The video shows a narrator in front of a screenshot of an FDA notice about the June recall of the test. She claims the test is a PCR test that “started the pandemic” and tricked people into losing their businesses and livelihood­s “because of a lie.”

However, the FDA notice makes clear the test is an antigen test, not a PCR test. PCR tests detect the genetic material of the virus and are considered the most sensitive type of test.

Antigen tests are rapid tests that are less sensitive and look for proteins called antigens on the surface of the virus. Innova Medical Group’s recalled antigen test also was never authorized by the FDA, while many other antigen tests and PCR tests have been.

Innova Medical Group recalled the test after the FDA found there was a risk it could give false results and said the test had been improperly distribute­d without the federal agency’s approval. FDA spokespers­on Jim McKinney told the AP that a different test, the Quidel Sofia 2 SARS Antigen FIA, was the first antigen covid-19 test it authorized for emergency use, on May 9, 2020. The agency had already given emergency use authorizat­ion to PCR tests to detect the virus months before that.

The covid-19 pandemic has claimed more than 600,000 lives in the United States and more than 4 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. — ALI SWENSON

★★★

CLAIM: Flights across the U.S. are backed up because pilots and crew are walking off boarded flights and refusing to take the mandated vaccine.

THE FACTS: Social media users are sharing a photo of a Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport arrival and departure board with numerous flight delays and cancellati­ons, falsely stating it reveals that pilots are walking off flights in protest of having to get covid-19 vaccines. The posts say that pilots and crew are refusing to “take the jab.”

The photo with the false claim began circulatin­g recently after weather and operationa­l challenges resulted in delayed and canceled flights. The board showed cancellati­ons for Spirit Airlines, American Airlines and JetBlue Airways.

All three airlines contacted by the AP confirmed that the delays and cancellati­ons were a result of weather. The AP reported last week that more than 227 Spirit flights had been canceled and 58 other flights were delayed on Aug. 2. The Air Line Pilots Associatio­n said in a statement that Spirit was also experienci­ng operationa­l issues that did not include a pilot strike.

“Any such rumor or report is false,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “Spirit’s pilots are working diligently with other employee groups to safely and profession­ally return to full operations as soon as possible.”

Erik Hofmeyer, communicat­ions director for Spirit, told the AP in an email that the post was not true. American Airlines also confirmed that weather caused the delays last week.

The airline is offering an incentive — an extra day off in 2022 and $50 from a recognitio­n program — to employees who get the covid-19 vaccine, officials said. United Airlines and Frontier Airlines will require their employees in the U.S. to be vaccinated against covid-19 around October.

JetBlue officials also confirmed there was no connection between vaccinatio­n among pilots and delays or cancellati­ons, citing weather in the Northeast and the accelerate­d ramp up in travel as responsibl­e.

“We are continuing to evaluate a vaccinatio­n requiremen­t for all JetBlue crew members, and in the meantime, we continue to highly recommend our crewmember­s get a shot to protect themselves and those around them,”

Derek Dombrowski, JetBlue’s manager of corporate communicat­ions, said in an email. — ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER BEATRICE DUPUY IN NEW YORK CONTRIBUTE­D THIS REPORT

★★★

CLAIM: The Canadian province of Alberta lifted all covid-19 restrictio­ns after health officials couldn’t provide evidence in court that the virus exists.

THE FACTS: Alberta relaxed its covid-19 restrictio­ns because the province hit predetermi­ned vaccinatio­n goals, not because of a court case. Due to a misreprese­ntation of what happened in a court case involving Patrick King, a Canadian resident, King is being falsely credited on social media with driving the change.

Court records show King was fined in December for violating covid-19 measures, specifical­ly for gathering in a large group while protesting masks and pandemic restrictio­ns. King, who represente­d himself in court, sought to challenge the validity of Alberta’s public health rules and requested that the province’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, present papers that discuss the isolation of SARS-CoV-2 “directly from a sample taken from a diseased patient.” In July, the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta quashed the subpoena.

The court said the health agency “has no material evidence” that pertains to King’s fine. Multiple social media users, including King, misreprese­nted the language used by the court, falsely suggesting it proved there is no evidence that covid-19 exists.

During an interview with conservati­ve podcaster Stew Peters, King falsely stated: “They knew this whole time that this was never isolated,” later adding that restrictio­ns were made to “bankrupt our country under the guise of a false pandemic.”

The AP has previously debunked the false claim that coronaviru­s has never been isolated. Chinese authoritie­s first isolated the virus on Jan. 7, 2020, and Canadian scientists did so in March of 2020.

“The Court decision regarding the subpoena was a preliminar­y technical matter,” Brett Boyden, a spokespers­on for the chief medical officer of health, told the AP in an email. “It was argued that Dr. Hinshaw did not have any material evidence to provide that would be relevant to the matters to be decided at trial. The Court decided to quash the subpoena.”

Social media users referred to King as a “freedom fighter” who “forced the government to admit” that covid-19 doesn’t exist, and falsely claimed that Alberta lifted all restrictio­ns because of King’s case.

Alberta recently eased covid-19 restrictio­ns but the decision had nothing to do with King, according to the health agency. The province entered the final phase of its Open for Summer Plan after at least 70% of residents over the age of 12 received at least one dose of the vaccine.

“It is false to claim there is any relationsh­ip between the decision on the subpoena and the lifting of public health measures,” Boyden said. He added, “Mr. King was ultimately found guilty of the offence at trial and sentenced to pay a fine.” King did not respond to a request for comment. — ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ARIJETA LAJKA IN NEW YORK CONTRIBUTE­D THIS REPORT

★★★

CLAIM: A photo shows Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky receiving the covid-19 vaccine.

THE FACTS: The photo was taken in February 2015 and shows the Republican senator receiving a hepatitis A booster shot. Paul has not received the covid-19 vaccine.

The falsely identified photo circulated widely on Twitter with a video Paul posted Sunday criticizin­g enforced vaccines, mask mandates and lockdown measures.

“We have either had covid, had the vaccine or been offered the vaccine,” Paul said in the video. “We will make our own health choices.”

The photo of Paul receiving the hepatitis A booster was taken at the Capitol physician’s office. Reporter Jeremy W. Peters captured the photo for The New York Times on Feb. 3, 2015.

“Ironic: Today I am getting my booster vaccine. Wonder how the liberal media will misreport this?” Paul tweeted at the time, sharing a photo of him getting the shot.

In May, the AP reported that Paul said he didn’t plan on getting the covid-19 vaccine, claiming he had “natural immunity.” He said he might change his stance depending on whether those who had covid-19 get reinfected at a greater rate than the vaccinated. Paul tested positive for the virus in March 2020.

In an email to the AP, Paul said he based his decision not to get the covid-19 vaccine now on an Israeli study that showed natural immunity is quite protective against reinfectio­n.

“But I keep an open mind and will continue to monitor the reinfectio­n data,” Paul said.

Public health officials are urging people to get vaccinated even if they’ve already been infected with the virus. A recent CDC study found people who recovered from covid-19 and ignored the advice were more than twice as likely to get reinfected compared to survivors who got shots. — ARIJETA LAJKA

 ?? (File Photo/AP/The Canadian Press/Jeff McIntosh) ?? Smoke from wildfires is carried by winds July 18, obscuring the view for visitors to the Calgary Stampede in Calgary, Alberta. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert the Canadian province of Alberta lifted all covid-19 restrictio­ns after health officials couldn’t provide evidence in court that the virus exists. Alberta relaxed its restrictio­ns because the province hit predetermi­ned vaccinatio­n goals, not because of a court case.
(File Photo/AP/The Canadian Press/Jeff McIntosh) Smoke from wildfires is carried by winds July 18, obscuring the view for visitors to the Calgary Stampede in Calgary, Alberta. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert the Canadian province of Alberta lifted all covid-19 restrictio­ns after health officials couldn’t provide evidence in court that the virus exists. Alberta relaxed its restrictio­ns because the province hit predetermi­ned vaccinatio­n goals, not because of a court case.
 ?? (AP/Susan Walsh) ?? President Joe Biden speaks Wednesday during a virtual meeting from the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex in Washington to discuss the importance of the bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert that $2.5 billion had been allocated toward a welcoming center for immigrants coming to the country illegally. The claims aren’t clear on the source of the supposed funding, but they imply a connection to a bipartisan infrastruc­ture plan approved by the Senate on Tuesday. In fact, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed, the CBP projects funded by the bill did not include any “welcoming center.” The bill funds a range of infrastruc­ture improvemen­t projects at land ports of entry, including repairs, expansion and modernizat­ion of border facilities that, in some cases, have not been updated in decades.
(AP/Susan Walsh) President Joe Biden speaks Wednesday during a virtual meeting from the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex in Washington to discuss the importance of the bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert that $2.5 billion had been allocated toward a welcoming center for immigrants coming to the country illegally. The claims aren’t clear on the source of the supposed funding, but they imply a connection to a bipartisan infrastruc­ture plan approved by the Senate on Tuesday. In fact, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed, the CBP projects funded by the bill did not include any “welcoming center.” The bill funds a range of infrastruc­ture improvemen­t projects at land ports of entry, including repairs, expansion and modernizat­ion of border facilities that, in some cases, have not been updated in decades.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Pool/J. Scott Applewhite) ?? Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., questions top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci on July 20 during a committee hearing on covid-19, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert a photo shows Paul receiving the covid-19 vaccine. But that New York Times photo was taken in February 2015 and shows the Republican senator receiving a hepatitis A booster shot. Paul has not received the covid-19 vaccine.
(File Photo/AP/Pool/J. Scott Applewhite) Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., questions top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci on July 20 during a committee hearing on covid-19, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Stories circulatin­g online incorrectl­y assert a photo shows Paul receiving the covid-19 vaccine. But that New York Times photo was taken in February 2015 and shows the Republican senator receiving a hepatitis A booster shot. Paul has not received the covid-19 vaccine.

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