We make fake news fake again.
"You can be an honest man and lie about any number of thing." - Dan Rather, Fired By CBS For Lying
Fake scientific research used to justify government policy should scare everyone, but it is common.
The New York Times and other media outlets continue to push a false narrative about warming ocean water and Hurricane Florence.
"If you repeat a lie often enough, people will believe it."
Not only did the New York Times lie about UN Ambassador Nikki Haley's curtains, they knew they were publishing a lie before they did it.
More fake news from the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Michael Wolff's book, Fire and Fury, has been hailed by President Trump's critics as an unflattering look inside his administration. However, a lot of this books main allegations have been debunked. Many of them by President Trump's ardent critics.
Immigrants rights groups have been saying for years that illegal immigrants commit less crime than U.S. citizens. While this has been challenged by third-party research for years, the government has now weighed in with its own data.
Facebook's attempt to flag fake news with a 'disputed' tag has been a disaster. People didn't trust the fact-checking services Facebook partnered with (with good reason) and the disputed stories were actually more likely to be believed.
Adam Hodge, former Democratic National Committee Communications Director, falsely claimed on Fox News there were record numbers of Obamacare signups during 2018. Actually, Adam, Obamacare enrollment went down in 2018. Just like it did in 2017.