Austin American-Statesman

Texas wildfires revive baseless claims

- Jeff Cercone PolitiFact.com

As Texas tries to contain the biggest wildfire in the state’s history, baseless conspiracy theories that circulated online after other well-known fires are resurfacin­g.

More than 1 million acres have burned in Texas amid the wildfires, which began in late February. The Smokehouse Creek Fire, the largest one, has killed at least two people and thousands of animals in a state known for its cattle industry.

False claims about government attacks with directed energy weapons and certain homes painted blue being spared that surfaced last year during devastatin­g wildfires in Maui, Hawaii, are now being applied to Texas. Other social media users have revived longrunnin­g conspiraci­es about attacks on the U.S. food supply by unnamed nefarious forces.

In the past two years, PolitiFact has debunked numerous claims that unknown actors are attacking the nation’s food supply, targeting farms and food processing facilities to starve people.

The claim of food supply attacks resurfaced after wildfires ravaged ranges in the Texas Panhandle and killed thousands of livestock animals. This claim is False. There’s no evidence the fires were intentiona­lly set, and experts we spoke with said the fires’ effect on the nation’s food supply probably would be minimal.

Texas authoritie­s continue to investigat­e the Smokehouse Creek fire’s cause, but they have not suggested it was intentiona­lly ignited. Hot weather, dry land and high winds have helped spread the still-burning blaze. One homeowner has sued a utility company for not maintainin­g a damaged power pole, alleging downed power lines started the fire. The company, Xcel Energy, has acknowledg­ed that its infrastruc­ture was involved in starting the fire but disputed accusation­s of negligence.

Some social media users said a video of a green laser beam is evidence that directed energy weapons were used to start the wildfires. This claim is False.

The green laser beam video predates the wildfires. It was shared online as early as Dec. 31, from an account known for videos that purport to show paranormal or extraterre­strial activity.

Other online claims baselessly alleged that directed energy weapons were used to start deadly fires that ravaged Maui in August. Wildfires there killed more than 100 people and destroyed thousands of buildings in the town of Lahaina.

PolitiFact has also debunked similar claims that those weapons were used to start fires in Canada and Russia.

Directed energy weapons are real, and the United States and other countries are researchin­g them for military purposes, but there’s no evidence they were used to ignite the Texas wildfires.

Social media users took comments that President Joe Biden made about a home that avoided burning during the Texas wildfires to revive a conspiracy theory that first surfaced during the Maui wildfires.

“If you fly over these areas that are burned to the ground, you’ll see in the midst of 20 homes that are just totally destroyed one home sitting there because it had the right roof on it,” Biden said.

One Instagram post showed the clip of Biden with text saying, “Remember the blue roofs during the Lahaina fires? Biden just seemed to confirm our suspicions.”

This claim is False.

“Blue roofs” refers to baseless claims that celebritie­s were painting their Maui roofs blue and that those homes were spared by directed energy weapons.

Experts we spoke to about the Maui claims said it’s common for fires to “hop” from place to place via flying embers and for some structures or trees not to ignite, even if everything around them does.

Biden was not talking about roof colors, a longer video of his comments shows. He was saying some roofs were intact because the structures were up to code, not because they were painted blue.

PolitiFact staff writers Sara Swann and Loreben Tuquero contribute­d to this report.

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