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93 published verifications about United States of America United States of America ×

“Approximately 90% of pediatric influenza deaths in the United States during the 2025-2026 flu season occurred among unvaccinated children.”

Misleading

The claim overstates the CDC's own reported figure for the 2025-2026 flu season by a meaningful margin. CDC's most current weekly surveillance data (April 2026) consistently reports that approximately 85% — not 90% — of pediatric influenza deaths occurred among unvaccinated children. The ~90% figure appears to be drawn from the prior 2024-2025 season or an early-season snapshot that was later revised downward. While the directional point — that unvaccinated children account for the overwhelming majority of deaths — is accurate, the specific percentage claimed is not supported by current CDC data.

“The United States has recorded 1,748 measles cases in 2026, which would be the highest annual total since 1991.”

False

The comparative claim fails on the facts. While the CDC does confirm 1,748 measles cases as of April 16, 2026, this is a partial-year count — and critically, the full year of 2025 already recorded approximately 2,288 cases, which was itself the highest annual total since 1991. Therefore, 1,748 cases would not represent the highest total since 1991; that distinction already belongs to 2025.

“The Federal Party, established in 1900, was the first political party in the Philippines and advocated for cooperation with the United States and eventual Philippine statehood.”

Mostly True

The claim's core assertions are well-supported by multiple independent academic sources: the Partido Federalista was established on December 23, 1900, is consistently identified as the first formal political party in the Philippines, and advocated for U.S. statehood. However, describing its platform as "cooperation with the United States" understates its actual position, which was outright annexation. The party also operated only until 1907 before transforming into the Progresista Party — context the claim omits.

“Rotavirus cases are surging across the United States as of April 2026.”

Misleading

There is credible evidence of elevated rotavirus activity in April 2026 — including wastewater detections and media reports citing CDC data — but the claim that "cases are surging across the United States" overstates what is directly established. The highest-authority CDC sources describe predictable winter-spring seasonality and steady vaccine coverage without declaring an anomalous national surge. Wastewater signals indicate community circulation but are not equivalent to confirmed clinical case counts, and no primary surveillance data in the evidence defines a baseline against which "surging" can be measured.

“March 2026 was the warmest March on record in the United States.”

Mostly True

NOAA data and multiple independent news sources confirm that March 2026 shattered temperature records, with an anomaly of 9.4°F above the 20th-century average — the largest for any month in over 130 years of records. The record applies specifically to the contiguous United States (Lower 48), which is NOAA's standard framework for national climate reporting. While the claim's phrasing of "the United States" aligns with how this record is conventionally described, it technically omits the distinction that Alaska and Hawaii are not included in the dataset.

“There exists a coordinated plan by the United States and Israel, led by Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, to destabilize and redesign the Middle East, with Turkey as a primary target aimed at weakening or dividing its unitary national structure.”

False

No credible evidence supports the existence of a coordinated US-Israel plan to destabilize or divide Turkey. The most authoritative sources — the US State Department, NATO, and Turkey's own Ministry of Foreign Affairs — explicitly deny any such effort, and multiple reports show Trump actively mediating between Israel and Turkey and at times siding with Erdoğan against Netanyahu. The claim conflates broad regional geopolitical rivalry with a specific conspiracy, relying on low-authority speculative commentary that lacks primary evidence.

“As of April 2026, most energy demand in the United States is met by nonrenewable energy sources.”

Mostly True

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.

“Donald Trump's address to the United Nations General Assembly used blunt labels, apocalyptic language, and domestic campaign tactics, representing a departure from traditional United States diplomatic rhetoric and signaling a shift away from the country's historical role as a global leader at the UN.”

Misleading

The speech's confrontational tone — including labels like "empty words," "hoax/scam," and "pathetic" — is well-documented by authoritative sources including UN records and major international outlets. However, the claim materially overstates novelty: Trump deployed similar sovereignty-first, anti-globalist rhetoric at the UN General Assembly as early as 2017-2018, making this a continuation rather than a new "departure." The claim also omits pro-UN statements made during the same visit, complicating the narrative of a unidirectional abandonment of U.S. leadership.

“U.S. wildfires were deliberately ignited using directed-energy weapons operated covertly.”

False

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 government of China is providing support to Iran in its conflict with the United States as of April 13, 2026.”

Misleading

The evidence supports that China has expressed diplomatic sympathy for Iran's sovereignty and historically helped Iran evade sanctions, but falls short of confirming active support "in its conflict with the United States" as the claim implies. The most authoritative independent source (USCC) notes China's official support after strikes has been largely limited to diplomatic statements. Allegations of military aid rest on unverified reporting and hedged statements, while China's own contemporaneous messaging emphasizes mediation and de-escalation.

“The United States has had a Muslim president at some point in its history.”

False

No U.S. president has ever identified as Muslim, and the historical record is unambiguous on this point. The National Archives, Pew Research Center, and multiple independent fact-checkers confirm that all 47 presidents have been Christian or deist. The most common basis for this claim — that Barack Obama was Muslim — has been thoroughly and repeatedly debunked by the very sources sometimes cited to support it. Public rumors and the absence of a constitutional religious test do not constitute evidence that a Muslim president has served.

“The middle class in the United States pays higher effective tax rates than the wealthy as of April 2026.”

False

Under standard tax measures, the U.S. middle class pays substantially lower effective tax rates than the wealthy. IRS data, the Peterson Foundation, and Treasury figures all show the middle quintile paying roughly 14% in comprehensive federal taxes versus 25–33% for top earners. The claim holds only for the ultra-wealthy top 0.0002% under non-standard income definitions that include unrealized gains — a narrow edge case that does not support the sweeping generalization presented.

“Donald Trump is personally gaining wealth and profit as a result of the ongoing war between the United States and Iran as of March 2026.”

Misleading

Misleading. While credible sources document Trump family enrichment through cryptocurrency ventures, Gulf real estate deals, and foreign government investments during the Iran conflict, none of the available evidence establishes that this wealth is causally derived from the war itself. The strongest war-specific allegation — that Trump's Turnberry resort "sought to profit" — describes attempted marketing, not verified revenue. Certified financial disclosures show no war-linked income streams. The claim conflates temporal correlation with causation.

“Annual US interest payments on the national debt exceed the total US defense budget.”

Mostly True

Under standard federal budget definitions, this claim is accurate. In FY2025, net interest on the national debt (~$970 billion) exceeded national defense outlays (~$917-919 billion), according to U.S. Treasury data, the American Action Forum, and the Peterson Foundation. This milestone was first reached in FY2024. However, the claim's phrasing is imprecise: if "total defense budget" is interpreted to include broader defense-related spending (VA, homeland security, DOE nuclear programs), the comparison could narrow or reverse. The standard reading supports the claim.

“Cold weather causes approximately 40,000 additional cardiovascular deaths each year in the United States.”

Misleading

Cold weather is well-established as a risk factor for cardiovascular death, and the general direction of this claim is supported by multiple credible sources. However, the specific figure of "approximately 40,000" traces to a single conference presentation (ACC.26, March 2026) that has not yet been peer-reviewed or independently replicated. The claim also omits that this is a statistical model estimate — not a direct cause-of-death count — and that confounding factors like respiratory infections, holiday behaviors, and socioeconomic conditions may contribute to winter cardiovascular mortality spikes.

“Collagen supplements in the United States are largely unregulated by the Food and Drug Administration due to the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994.”

Mostly True

The claim is substantially accurate. DSHEA (1994) does exempt collagen supplements from FDA premarket approval and shifts the burden of proving unsafety to the FDA, which multiple peer-reviewed and medical sources confirm. However, "largely unregulated" overstates the situation: the FDA retains meaningful post-market authority including cGMP manufacturing standards, labeling enforcement, adulteration removal powers, and premarket safety review for new dietary ingredients. A more precise framing would be "largely exempt from premarket approval requirements" rather than "largely unregulated."

“China is on track to surpass the United States as the world's dominant global superpower in terms of overall international influence.”

Misleading

China's global influence is genuinely rising and gaps with the U.S. are narrowing in trade, manufacturing, and some technology sectors. However, the claim overstates the evidence. Most supporting data reflects public expectations and perception polls, not confirmed power transfers. The U.S. retains decisive advantages in military capability (76% vs. 14% global recognition), alliance networks, nominal GDP, finance, and institutional leadership. China also faces significant economic and demographic headwinds. The evidence supports a narrowing competition, not an inevitable Chinese surpassing of U.S. dominance.

“On or around March 23, 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran demanding the full and unimpeded reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, threatening to destroy Iranian energy infrastructure if the demand was not met.”

True

The claim is accurate. Over fifteen independent, high-authority news outlets — including AP News, The Guardian, CBS News, Bloomberg, TIME, and PBS — confirm that Trump posted a 48-hour ultimatum on Truth Social around March 22, 2026, demanding Iran fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz and threatening to destroy Iranian power plants. The claim's use of "energy infrastructure" slightly broadens Trump's specific "power plants" language, and the exact posting date was March 21–22 (with the deadline expiring around March 23–24), but the overall claim is substantively correct.

“As of March 2026, the United States under President Donald Trump and Iran are engaged in or moving toward a resolution of military or diplomatic hostilities.”

False

As of March 2026, the United States is conducting a large-scale military campaign against Iran — Operation Epic Fury — with hundreds of strikes across 26 of Iran's 31 provinces, 2,200 additional Marines deployed, and zero diplomatic or consular relations. Trump's vague social media musing about "winding down" operations is explicitly paired with reporting that a full ceasefire is not on the table. Allied governments expect the conflict to last into late 2026. The evidence overwhelmingly shows active, escalating war — not movement toward resolution.

“The EPA's rollback of greenhouse gas emissions standards is projected to save Americans $1.3 trillion.”

Misleading

The EPA did project $1.3 trillion in compliance-cost savings from rolling back greenhouse gas standards. However, the claim is misleading because the EPA's own regulatory impact analysis simultaneously projects approximately $1.5 trillion in increased fuel and maintenance costs through 2055 — more than offsetting the compliance savings. Independent analyses from RFF and ACEEE also find net costs to consumers and society. The phrase "save Americans $1.3 trillion" presents a gross figure as though it were a net benefit, omitting the larger costs documented in the same EPA analysis.