3 General claim verifications about United States United States ×
“As of April 2026, most energy demand in the United States is met by nonrenewable energy sources.”
The core claim is well-supported: EIA data from April 2026 shows nonrenewable sources—including natural gas, petroleum, coal, and nuclear—supply roughly 73% of U.S. electricity generation and dominate total energy consumption. Renewables account for approximately 26-27% of electricity and a smaller share of overall energy demand. Minor caveats include the classification of nuclear as "nonrenewable" and the fact that renewables are leading new capacity growth, but neither changes the fundamental accuracy of the claim.
“U.S. wildfires were deliberately ignited using directed-energy weapons operated covertly.”
This claim is false. Every credible source — from USGS and NASA to CAL FIRE and the Bureau of Land Management — attributes U.S. wildfires to well-documented causes: lightning, human activities (campfires, powerline failures, arson, debris burning), and climate-driven conditions. Multiple independent fact-checkers investigated the directed-energy weapons narrative specifically and found zero supporting evidence. The only source lending any support merely republished unverified social media posts with no expert or physical corroboration.
“The number of public libraries in the United States exceeds the number of McDonald's restaurant locations in the United States.”
Federal data from the Institute of Museum and Library Services reports over 17,000 public library locations (main libraries, branches, and bookmobiles) in the United States. Multiple independent sources place U.S. McDonald's restaurant locations at approximately 13,600–13,800. The margin of roughly 3,200+ locations comfortably supports the claim. While some readers may think "libraries" means only standalone buildings, the standard institutional definition counts all public library service outlets — the same unit-of-analysis used for restaurant locations.