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Fact Check

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Independent fact-checking and media literacy for a world drowning in misinformation. We investigate viral claims, political statements, and health hoaxes — checking every fact against primary sources before publishing a verdict.

FALSE Economy

Jobs report figures cited out of context in viral social media posts

The numbers are technically accurate but cherry-pick a three-month window while omitting year-over-year comparisons that tell a completely different story about labor market trends.

Verdicts:
TRUE: Accurate and well-supported by evidence
FALSE: Demonstrably inaccurate
MISLEADING: Contains truth but omits critical context
UNVERIFIED: Cannot be confirmed with available evidence

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FALSE Politics

Viral claim about federal spending contains significant factual errors

A widely-shared graphic claiming federal discretionary spending doubled in three years misrepresents budget data by ignoring inflation adjustments and conflating discretionary with mandatory outlays. When corrected for inflation, real discretionary spending rose 11% over the period in question.

TRUE Health

Studies do confirm link between processed foods and inflammation markers

Multiple peer-reviewed studies published since 2021 support this frequently disputed claim, though the causal mechanism remains under active investigation. The correlation between ultra-processed food consumption and elevated inflammatory biomarkers such as C-reactive protein is well-documented in the literature.

MISLEADING Economy

Jobs report figures cited out of context in viral social media posts

The numbers are technically accurate but cherry-pick a three-month window while omitting year-over-year comparisons that tell a different story. The posts reference seasonally unadjusted data for a quarter that historically shows weaker job creation, without disclosing that seasonal adjustment is standard practice.

FALSE Science

No, the WHO did not reverse its position on natural immunity

Screenshots claiming a WHO reversal are taken from a 2020 document that has since been updated and superseded. The current WHO guidance says something meaningfully different. The original document was a preliminary draft published during early pandemic uncertainty, not a final policy position.

UNVERIFIED World

Claims about foreign election interference lack verifiable sourcing

While intelligence reports acknowledge general concerns about foreign influence operations, the specific statistics circulating online trace back to a single anonymous blog post with no disclosed methodology. We contacted five independent intelligence analysts — none could identify the original data source.

MISLEADING Social Media

Crime statistic shared 200K times omits critical geographic context

The raw number is accurate but comparing cities of vastly different population sizes without per-capita adjustment produces a deeply misleading impression. Adjusting for population, the city with the "highest crime" in the viral post ranks 34th nationally. The post's framing also blends violent and property crime categories without distinction.

FALSE Politics

"Social Security will be completely bankrupt by 2030" — what the trustees actually project

This claim, shared over 340,000 times, misrepresents the Social Security trustees' report on two critical points: the projected depletion date is 2035, not 2030, and depletion of trust fund reserves does not mean zero benefits. Payroll tax revenue would continue funding approximately 83% of scheduled benefits.

TRUE Science

Microplastics have been found in human blood — here is what the science says

A 2022 study published in Environment International confirmed microplastic particles in the blood of 77% of tested participants. The finding is real and well-documented. What remains contested is the health significance — no study has yet established a causal link between blood microplastics and specific disease outcomes in humans.

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