Image: Getty Images 2021 On January 20th, Joe Biden delivered his inaugural address which fact checkers have since combed through for the most party, accurately. However, NPR and other outlets have stated that Biden's statement regarding COVID deaths was overstated. Joe Biden said that: It’s taken as many lives in one year as America lost in all of World War II. NPR claimed that: While the number is close, this is a slight overstatement. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, the total American deaths in World War II totaled 405,…
Image Credit: The New York Times During the 2020 Presidential debate, multiple media sources reported that President Donald Trump refused to denounce "white supremacy". Here are just a few of the notable headlines. CNN White House shows no signs of backing down from Trump's refusal to condemn White supremacy NPR From Debate Stage, Trump Declines To Denounce White Supremacy The New York Times Trump Refuses to Denounce White Supremacy in Chaotic Debate CBS News Trump faces criticism for refusing to condemn white supremacists The Gu…
FBI Wanted for Capitol Building Siege In an article on FactCheck.org titles "" the author inaccurately claims that: Viral social media posts and a Republican House member have amplified claims wrongly identifying some right-wing figures at the U.S. Capitol riot as part of “antifa.” The claims feed into an unfounded conspiracy theory that anti-fascist activists in disguise orchestrated the event. Whereas they cover many social media posts that are indeed inaccurate evidence of any anti-Trump activist or activist group. They fail to…
Snopes published a fact check titled "Did Trump Say Election Fraud Allows for 'Termination' of US Constitution?" to which they said was accurate, however, misleadingly. Others such as The Washington Post, New York Times, Politico, MSNBC, Fox News, and of course, CNN, made more direct claims that Donald Trump "called for the termination of the U.S. Constitution". The only problem with these claims is that they are inaccurate. Snopes Misleading Claim In Snopes "context" section, it states: In a Truth Social …
When the Supreme Court turned away Donald Trump’s appeal in the E. Jean Carroll case on June 29, 2026, several major outlets framed the moment as a sweeping judicial defeat. CNN told readers that “Trump must pay E. Jean Carroll $5 million after Supreme Court denies his appeal of sexual abuse verdict,” and the Wall Street Journal ran a similar line. Read quickly, those headlines suggest the nation’s highest court weighed the evidence, ruled against the president, and affirmed a finding of sexual abuse. That is not what happened, and the distanc…