From The International Fact-Checking Network <[email protected]>
Subject Anti-vax claims center on the laws of attraction
Date July 1, 2021 1:05 PM
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Fact-checks about magnets, false prophets, and air travel featured prominently in the last month of the CoronavirusFacts Alliance database. Email not displaying correctly?
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• In this edition you will find:
• A look at the last month of COVID-19 falsehoods
• Animal Politico explains Mexican pot policy
• PolitiFact looks at how falsehoods caused the Jan. 6
Magnetic Personalities
By microstock3D/ Shutterstock

3,190 fact checks were added to the CoronavirusFacts Alliance database ([link removed]) in the first half of 2021, with fact checks about vaccines dominating the list. The alliance database combines the work of more than 90 fact-checking organizations from more than 70 countries contributing fact checks in more than 40 languages.
In the past month, magnetism has taken center stage when it comes to vaccine falsehoods, with some falsehoods going so far as to claim that vaccinated people are detectable by Bluetooth. PolitiFact ([link removed]) and Ukrainian fact-checking outlet VoxCheck ([link removed]) debunked this falsehood in May with Myth Detector in Georgia ([link removed]) and Teyit in Turkey ([link removed]) batting it down in June.
June also saw a continuation of people with advanced degrees using/abusing the societal respect conferred upon their academic achievement to make unfounded claims about COVID-19. Agence France Presse ([link removed]) knocked down a claim by one of the “disinformation dozen” ([link removed]) about vaccine shedding, which is the false notion that vaccinated people can shed vaccines and vaccinate the unvaccinated (that’s not how vaccines work).
There were also a handful of false claims that used the specter of a prominent anti-vaxxer to gain traction. Aos Fatos ([link removed]) and Agência Lupa ([link removed]) in Brazil, Maldita.es ([link removed]) in Spain, Colombiacheck ([link removed]) in Colombia and Animal Politico ([link removed]) in Mexico all discovered that Luc Montagnier — a French Nobel laureate who’s made several false claims about COVID-19 — hadn’t claimed that vaccinated people would die in two years. The quote had been fabricated from an interview where Montagnier made a separate false claim that vaccines
were creating new COVID-19 variants. That claim is not supported by science.
As travel picks up in the United States and Europe, several fact checks knocked down a falsehood that airlines were considering banning vaccinated passengers. The claims cited rare instances of blood clots on long haul flights ([link removed]) and trumped up fears of rare blood clots associated with some of the vaccines to justify the ban. However, fact-checkers in Spain ([link removed]) , Poland ([link removed]) , Brazil ([link removed]) and the United States ([link removed]) all found that airlines are encouraging passengers to get vaccinated, not banning them.

Interesting fact checks
AP Photo/Marco Ugarte, File
• Animal Politico: "Marijuana: What the Court decided and what consumers can do now" ([link removed]) (in Spanish)
• Mexico’s Supreme Judicial Court struck down that country’s criminalization of marijuana, but confusion remains about what the decision actually means. Animal Politico used this explainer to lay out what’s now legal, what’s not, and what are the possible next steps.
• FactCheck.org: "The Facts – and Gaps – on the Origin of the Coronavirus" ([link removed]) (in English)
• The origins of the COVID-19 pandemic have long been a political football. To clear up the debate, FactCheck.org gave a rundown of all the possible theories, as well as the evidence supporting or detracting from them.
Quick hits
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From the news:
• "‘Pierogies do not stop COVID’: Pittsburgh pediatrician battles virus misinformation on TikTok," ([link removed]) from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Dr. Todd Wolynn said social media is a “necessary tool” for doctors to spread verified information about COVID-19 and a host of other health issues.
• "Voter fraud gains momentum in Germany," ([link removed]) from Politico.eu. A less than favorable result in a regional East German election is spurring far right parties to make unfounded claims of voter fraud ahead of federal elections in September.
• "Disinformation exports: How foreign anti-vaccine narratives reached West African communities online," ([link removed]) from First Draft. Narratives playing on distrust of Western institutions, falsehoods about depopulation as well as narratives and techniques perfected outside of West Africa for spreading disinformation are raising concerns about increased vaccine hesitancy.
From/for the community:
• "Misinformation and the Jan. 6 insurrection: When ‘patriot warriors’ were fed lies," ([link removed]) from PolitiFact. This is the first of a series of articles looking at the role of falsehoods in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection. PolitiFact reporters used court records and other public documents to profile some of the people charged in the riot.
• "Punitive laws are failing to curb misinformation in Africa," ([link removed]) from Nieman Lab. IFCN advisory board member Peter Cunliffe-Jones, along with fellow researchers Alan Finlay and Anya Schiffrin, looked into anti-misinformation laws and found they do more to chill all forms of speech rather than cut down on falsehoods.
• "Poynter and MediaWise announce a new class of Campus Correspondents," ([link removed]) from Poynter. Meet the new crop of eight American college students, who after receiving media literacy training from MediaWise will return to their campuses to help train their classmates.

If you are a fact-checker and you’d like your work/projects/achievements highlighted in the next edition, send us an email at [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) by next Tuesday.
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Harrison Mantas
Reporter, IFCN
@HarrisonMantas ([link removed])

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