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"factually" Definitions
  1. in a way that is based on or connected with facts

782 Sentences With "factually"

How to use factually in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "factually" and check conjugation/comparative form for "factually". Mastering all the usages of "factually" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That headline is not a Mad Libs gone awry, it is as factually correct as factually correct gets.
The claim is "factually incorrect", though now Mr Trump and Mr Barr apparently consider it to be factually correct.
If an article is basically factually correct, but has a headline that is basically factually wrong, fact-checkers ought to take action — or what else are they for?
" ZDF director Thomas Bellut said Brase had reported from Turkey factually and knowledgeably, adding: "ZDF will continue to report about this important country extensively, impartially, factually and critically.
Deciding whether or not you're going to charge someone with false statements or perjury is not that hard, factually or legally — maybe politically, but not factually or legally.
People repeat things that are factually inaccurate all the time.
This has always been a bad argument, legally and factually.
Trump's statements about many topics have often been ... factually challenged.
But what part of what Romney said was factually wrong?
"unborn children," and make factually inaccurate claims about women's bodies.
He included a new, if factually incorrect, criticism of Mrs.
Music doesn't need to be factually accurate to be true.
I'M KIDDING, EXCEPT THAT'S FACTUALLY TRUE MY EXPECTATION IS -- LOOK.
A CNN investigation shows that Dorsey's statement is factually false.
"I want to respond carefully to everything factually," he said.
"When I said that, it was true, factually," Kudlow added.
" Aro said the State Department's original claims were "factually incorrect.
Many criticized the meme as both offensive and factually inaccurate.
We sit ready and waiting for a real, factually informed discussion.
"Jones seemed a lot more than factually incorrect, I said."O.
A lot of what he says is simply factually not true.
Lofgren's question came after a long, factually sketchy grilling from Rep.
Right now this argument has the benefit of being factually true.
Factually, Powell's remarks on Wednesday and in October are both true.
Townhall columnist Michelle Malkin said Kimmel's emotional plea was factually incorrect.
Their talking points are trite, combative and often times factually incorrect.
What would happen if a verified publication wrote something factually incorrect?
" Jones seemed a lot more than factually incorrect, I said. "O.
According to the SIGAR audit, that is factually correct but incomplete.
"Factually, the complainant had her phone the entire time," Gaitman said.
Unfortunately, most of those thoughts are either wrong or factually questionable.
That's more than 218 factually inaccurate or incorrect statements a day.
DOE's proposal is flimsy: factually unsupported, analytically flawed, and legally deficient.
And what he said is completely out of line and factually incorrect.
But others defended the president's speech as being factually accurate, if uncouth.
All that said, what he called me out on wasn't factually correct.
Given all that, Trump's denials might make sense politically — if not factually.
Holt is factually wrong: Stop-and-frisk has not been ruled unconstitutional.
Maybe one person's actually right, factually, and the other person is wrong.
Cooper: But being factually correct is important— Ocasio-Cortez: It's absolutely important.
Donald Trump Jr.'s comments were offensive, factually inaccurate and highly misleading.
Narratives to the contrary are factually inaccurate and defamatory to UAM staff.
For the most part she just dismissed his accusations as factually inaccurate.
It's hard enough to cut through all the factually dubious campaign rhetoric.
This is all wayyyy premature and, where it's not premature, factually inaccurate.
"This gives an opportunity to tell the story factually," Coles-Henry said.
"The question of slackness in jobs is absolutely factually incorrect," he said.
The scripted mini-series "An American Saga" offers a factually looser version.
The tweet drew immediate criticism, in part because it is factually incorrect.
Factually, you can say these companies were together before, what's the difference?
To make a "correction" to a story indicates something was factually wrong.
This all suggests that these factually overblown claims are politically quite potent.
The spot, panned as racist and fear-mongering, was also factually inaccurate.
While perhaps not factually inaccurate, the results were closer to almost-fake tech.
Or it's politically tainted, or there's an agenda but it's not factually untrue.
So for them to suggest that we have everything is just factually incorrect.
"The indictment returned against me today is factually and legally flawed," Brissette said.
Factually inaccurate sources also tend to have strong left- or right-wing slants.
In other words, nearly two-thirds of stories repeated a factually incorrect claim.
The next, it was factually incorrect tweets (except when they're about climate change).
This rhetoric is not only harmful to Israel, it is also factually incorrect.
But also some of those stories were highly embarrassing and probably factually inaccurate.
"What @andersoncooper just said about VP Biden's fundraiser is factually incorrect," she tweeted.
By the Book has to be factually accurate and conform to Times style.
"Factually speaking, the country is not actually full — that's impossible," Ms. Hirt said.
"These claims are factually wrong," Jose Casteneda, a spokesperson for Google, told Recode.
"Factually it may be, but legally it is not — witness Haiti," she said.
It wasn't intended to be a factually-accurate critique of the guy's work.
At best, it is beside the point, and at worst is factually incorrect.
The "authenticity" that his followers so admire is factually wrong and morally repulsive.
So to say that renewables reduce reliability or resilience is just factually wrong.
The answer to "fake news" is not just deleting posts that are factually incorrect.
Their voices rose as they vented, not altogether factually, about the conspiracy they faced.
It is factually inaccurate for Ms. Ratajkowski to claim these designs as her own.
But the big problem with Giuliani's comments is not just that they're factually incorrect.
Our article is factually accurate and The Weekly Standard's allegation against us is wrong.
He also insisted on defending two factually incorrect statements he made the previous night.
But just because you find an ideological viewpoint abhorrent doesn't mean it's factually incorrect.
But I've never seen so many stupid, factually incorrect messages on a single website.
I think that is what he has referred to, which is again factually correct.
Why won't they give a reason for this that is at least factually correct?
Could you briefly explain why this characterization of the contemporary US is factually wrong?
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," Rosenstein said last year.
"I just respectfully, factually, disagree with Chairman Burr," Warner told The Hill on Wednesday.
Factually speaking, he doesn't need expensive nuclear weapons to strategically threaten the United States.
His Twitter account recently shared a video that was both racist and factually inaccurate.
While understandable, this mistake is not only factually wrong, but it is also harmful.
It's impossible to see someone's point of view when they're just factually inaccurate. Yeah.
This notion is both factually baseless and harmful to my patients and their families.
This talking point gets people's attention about election security, but it's also factually wrong.
And so to put out headlines that are factually false does no one any good.
"This lawsuit is legally and factually meritless," Coca-Cola told MUNCHIES in an e-mail.
Which means when something as factually absurd crosses some prosecutor's desk, you're at their mercy.
But all news isn't created equally (or, it bears repeating every day of 2017, factually).
This is factually true: Gordon co-wrote three tracks on Lemonade and earned that money.
The state's position on TTHM is factually accurate; long-term exposure is the biggest concern.
" The governor asks: "Factually accurate update; but how did it go over with the residents?
This notion that drug prices are out of control is widely held but factually incorrect.
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," Rosenstein said in a statement.
Nonetheless, there's a way to factually separate the enemies from her own self-destructive actions.
Less testosterone may be factually true, but the reversion to such obvious stereotypes is frustrating.
The opposing sides remain politically and factually divided arguing about basic facts and potential solutions.
" The Justice Department issued a statement calling McCabe's account of events "inaccurate and factually incorrect.
His self-deprecation of his playing career was great entertainment, but factually overdone as his .
The phrase "however factually accurate" is a record scratch across the middle of the paragraph.
The problem isn't that Kaepernick and Rapinoe are factually wrong about racism or police brutality.
If they were to do that, then most of the content wouldn't be factually accurate.
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," he said in a statement.
He's made a number of factually inaccurate statements about the threat posed by the virus.
And factually, you can just see that it will harm small-business development and growth.
The story was pulled after Facebook became aware that it was factually inaccurate Monday morning.
"Clearly, factually, people who voted for Trump voted for our Democratic gubernatorial candidates," said Gov.
Sometimes, his factually challenged statements or tweets now just draw laughs, another congressional aide said.
Not only is the strip just plain factually incorrect—Williams has a daughter, you dummies!!
We have a right to say what is factually correct or incorrect about what happened.
They say her new book contains factually inaccurate statements, uncredited reporting, and even plagiarism. 5.
But it's factually wrong to say that congressional support for Israel is "all about" money.
Simply to point out something that is factually irrefutable: that some of them are criminals.
Because of this overarching theme of family dysfunction, it is (factually) the perfect Thanksgiving family binge.
"The history that they teach you about the Holocaust is not factually accurate whatsoever," he says.
No matter how nasty a tweet, as long as it's factually correct, it cannot be libelous.
He said the Times report was "inaccurate and factually incorrect," which both mean the same thing.
But for the record, the three headlines in question appear to be relevant and factually accurate.
The text, under the doctrine of inerrancy, is factually perfect and not open to multiple interpretations.
Transgender people exist; it is factually incorrect to say that certain views about them do not.
It&aposs just, you know, factually, numbers don&apost lie, and that is not the case.
DIY hormones are theoretically viable and factually desirable enough that the idea demands discussion and engagement.
"All such reports and allegations are absolutely false, and factually incorrect," it said in a statement.
"Those bodies are factually deprived of their independence," Mr. Scala said in a statement this month.
So if the claim is that he's admitted to leaking classified information, that's simply factually false.
Yeah, the GOP is also being hypocritical, but its current position is the factually correct one.
Trump's suggestion that transgender military personnel burden the military with undue financial strain is factually unfounded.
In this context, it is probably not factually correct to say your friend gave you nothing.
Nonetheless, it is just factually accurate that monetary policy has not been sufficiently oriented toward growth.
"It is not factually true," said Jason Kibbey, the chief executive of the Sustainable Apparel Coalition.
They're factually wrong and stigmatizing to millions of completely nonviolent Americans living with severe mental illness.
In the end, the published story was factually correct and about as straightforward as they come.
" India's Ministry of External Affairs responded to Khan's statements by calling them "factually inaccurate and contradictory.
For most people, getting something factually wrong -- especially in a public setting -- is disconcerting and embarrassing.
His critics knowingly made "factually false claims" and deliberately smeared his research, he said in an email.
"I've had millions of dollars of ads run against me that were factually incorrect," Blackburn told Hill.
Tim Allen was factually hotter as Santa than he was as his actual character in Santa Clause.
Some of Trump's worst moments have come when he has been factually off-base or overly combative.
"The notion that manufacturing in the United States is in decline is factually incorrect," the report states.
Assange's factually threadbare indictment doesn't give much indication of how strong a conspiracy case the government has.
A tweet posted by a self-proclaimed "wife, mother, Christian" isn't just deplorable, but also factually incorrect.
Tidal last year denied any manipulation had taken place and said the DN article was factually wrong.
In the era of "fake news," opposing viewpoints are instantaneously categorized as factually inaccurate or transparently biased.
This is not only factually false, it's a wildly distorted view of all the nation stands for.
"[This is] an allegation that appeared in a deposition but that was never factually adjudicated," Shapiro said.
A lot of things are being said on both sides that are dubious, exaggerated or factually inaccurate.
No such gross misrepresentation of monastic scribal production — as in, factually wrong — has been published for decades.
But the two situations are so factually and legally remote that the analogy cannot be taken seriously.
However, even that figure is wrong, but a Democratic primary is no place for the factually preoccupied.
You can usually rely on Trump to provide the most factually challenging claims among anyone in Washington.
"We're watching, too, an unraveling in front of us, both factually and also temperamentally," he adds.https://t.
There are a lot of things wrong with this logic (and these tweets) -- both factually and morally.
Factually and legally, Taiwan island has been and will always remain an inalienable part of China's territory.
The process of researching and factually checking data is lengthy: "photographic documentation, multi-media, interviews," said Lustbader.
In addition to calling Streep overrated, Trump claimed that the basis of her speech was factually inaccurate.
But this simple understanding is seriously incomplete—both factually, and in its view on the way governments behave.
"The history that they taught you in middle school is not factually accurate," Millennial Matt tells his viewers.
We should point out that factually, four of the last eight justices were confirmed in a midterm election.
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," Rosenstein said in a statement to BuzzFeed News.
Even when not deliberately toxic, many on-screen depictions of mental illness have been factually and flatly wrong.
But according to Twitter, these claims are factually incorrect and misleadingly portrayed by O'Keefe's media organization Project Veritas.
Trump found the claim factually inaccurate, since Conway is at the debate in Virginia and he's in Nevada.
The Clinton campaign says it plans to drive home the point that Trump habitually makes factually inaccurate statements.
"The New York Times' story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," he said in a statement to the newspaper.
"The New York Times' story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," he said in a statement to the newspaper.
And the plot resolves factually, rather than having you see the same story completely subjectively from different perspectives.
However, when it comes challenging outright factually incorrect statements, "there are right ways to do that," he said.
"It's factually inaccurate that the oil company's lobbyists are supporting me," Cruz told reporters Saturday night in Waverly.
Beukema warned that this search manipulation bug could be used to spread factually incorrect information, or even propaganda.
We try to do things factually but we don't try to counter conspiracy theories, that kind of thing.
Factually speaking, these are the tallest sea cliffs in the Southern Hemisphere, reaching over 300m above sea level.
Not only is the stigma factually and morally incorrect, it distracts from what we know — it's the guns.
Even before the bizarre, factually murky attacks this week, Republican leaders hoped Blankenship's primary bid would fall short.
"Yesterday, we worked very factually and we did well," said Julia Kloeckner, a senior member of the CDU.
Both sides subsequently cast aspersions that the other side is not just morally bankrupt but also factually wrong.
We can't allow the political discourse in the nation be framed by fake news and "factually-challenged" assertions.
In lieu of either factually representing or making sense of the world, they invite us to escape it.
One of their topics is whether fiction, if set in a recognizable historical time, must be factually accurate.
He had highlighted passages in Mark Lewisohn's most recent work, "Tune In," that he thought were factually incorrect.
Having worked directly with Guantanamo detainees who have experienced torture, Prasow found the installation disconcerting and factually incorrect.
But then Ms. Cochran went on to say that the bulk of the negative responses were factually wrong.
"Given what we know factually, it looks to me like the market had gone too far," Kudlow said.
We'll continue to do that, factually and fairly, and to cover Kid Rock and the issues as well.
"It's a factually complex case, but it's not that the opinion is hard to comply with," she said.
Indian military officials accused Pakistan of "factually incorrect statements" on its plane shootings and intentionally targeting military installations.
This means I know, factually, that the claim that negotiating committtees are "led by WGAE officials" is false.
In some cases, the companies label the material factually dubious or use their algorithms to limit its spread.
"What Anderson Cooper just said about VP Biden's fundraiser is factually incorrect," Biden senior adviser Symone Sanders tweeted.
"We believe these claims are not legally or factually supported, and ultimately will not be sustained," Kupferstein said.
Mr. Ravenell called the judge's opinion "factually wrong and legally flawed in many respects," but would not elaborate.
To tell them, well, there were only 300,000 apprehensions last year — that's factually correct; it tells a story.
In a tweet following the report, the EU Budget Commissioner Gunther Oettinger said the media report was factually incorrect.
"You speak very factually, very superficially, but you just don't go into the heart and the soul," she said.
Let&aposs just go and roll back the tape, you just said inadvertently, you&aposre factually wrong about that.
Rosenstein disputed the Times' story calling it "inaccurate and factually incorrect" in a statement provided to the news agency.
" Here at The Verge, we (factually) explained that "Earth is dying and this couple is crowdfunding a sex button.
" When a Twitter user accused CrossFit of pulling a publicity stunt, Berger shot back: "Everything said was factually accurate.
It was left to the journalist to point out InfoWars' malicious disinformation is rather more than just factually incorrect.
But Trump also entrenched himself on two issues the debate's moderator, Holt, called out on for being factually inaccurate.
For one, apps that aren't full of lies tend to be less engaging than their less factually rigorous competition.
But, at best, thinking that it must be so much easier to be a lesbian is just factually wrong.
None of these stories were factually inaccurate, per se, since they usually relied heavily on quotes from conspiracy theorists.
" J&J's Janssen unit said the company believed the allegations in the lawsuit were "both legally and factually unfounded.
Some of these statements are diametrically opposed to existing treaties; others are factually incorrect, still others are ill advised.
This isn't factually the case, of course—the prosecution of drug-induced homicides is likely to affect minorities disproportionately.
Judge Kavanaugh's backers in the Senate brushed this off by pointing out that his 2003 statement was factually correct.
Part of what's made this country great is a commitment to being reality based and to being factually grounded.
Friend passes will make Raya more democratic, Mr. Gendelman said, a point that is directionally if not factually correct.
Petta's attorney, Ryan Lorenz, says consumers need to know there can be consequences if they post factually incorrect information.
Usually, CBS runs the most factually disciplined news broadcast among the big three but this one departs from that.
"Each of the components of this outlandish claim should be scrutinized through careful consideration, and verified factually," she said.
Nothing in that article was factually incorrect, even looking at it now, I don't even think it's that controversial.
And sometimes a person who is factually guilty is also the victim of misconduct by the police or prosecutors.
The Department of Homeland Security denied the report, a spokesman calling it "factually inaccurate and misleading" in a statement.
You can't depict scenes 100 percent factually when nobody knows (aside from Cheney, of course) exactly what was said when.
The term generally refers to fabricated news that has no basis in fact but is presented as being factually accurate.
Many conservatives denounced her for peddling a "liberal narrative" (most did not claim she was factually wrong, though some did).
It's an informative and factually supported consideration of what Starlink says about what the future looks like for Earthbound skywatchers.
Not choosing sides -- but being more aggressive in calling out what is not factually accurate when we're being BS-ed.
"The Deputy Attorney General again rejects Mr. McCabe's recitation of events as inaccurate and factually incorrect," a DOJ spokesperson said.
If you say the president of the USA is Donald Duck, it's factually wrong, but spellchecker won't flag it up.
On the other hand, his critics have time and again shown how factually incorrect and morally repugnant his interpretations are.
After this investigation was published, more than 100 scientists called for a retraction, stating that the report was factually incorrect.
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," He said in a statement issued by the Justice Department.
Factually, it both seems like a watered down version of ObamaCare and second, it fails to offer valid healthcare reform.
Rosenstein has called the Times article "factually incorrect" and some officials defending Rosenstein said his comments were made in jest.
Journalists also build bridges through stories that shock or disturb us -- by factually and meticulously revealing wrongdoing, incompetence or hypocrisy.
Rosenstein has claimed the report is "factually incorrect" and some officials defending Rosenstein claimed that the remarks were made sarcastically.
"I believe parts of it, and then there are other parts that are factually wrong," Haberman said Friday on CNN.
"Is that a bird on your shoulder?" he inquired, a moment later, to the woman who had, factually, two birds.
"The New York Times's story is inaccurate and factually incorrect," Rosenstein said in a statement released by the Justice Department.
Content that is found to be factually incorrect appears less prominently on the site's news feed and is labeled false.
"I don't think I can say it's legally recognizable, but factually recognizable," she said during the hearings earlier this month.
A similar effort directed at this alleged political bias could help guide the moderation conversation back to more factually solid ground.
" In a BBC interview that same month, Brafman said that the cases against Weinstein are "legally defective or factually not supported.
It's always a lot of fun, and it's a particular challenge to write music that is funny, engaging, and factually accurate.
The provincial government has withdrawn its original statement issued on Wednesday because it was not factually correct, an official told Reuters.
Here is Volkswagen's full statement to CNBC: The SEC's complaint is legally and factually flawed, and Volkswagen will contest it vigorously.
Jacobs: "The only thing in the Gianforte statement that is factually correct is my name and my place of employment." pic.twitter.
Trump is not going to all of a sudden come up with a sophisticated and factually grounded take on foreign policy.
Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based.
But that claim—which constituted the opening sentence of the article—and the general tilt of the piece was factually wrong.
The links certainly don't have to be factually accurate, given that a climate change denial story has appeared in the module.
Rosenstein has called the Times article "factually incorrect" and some officials defending Rosenstein separately said his comments were made in jest.
CM: Even when we do scripted television, even when we have done "Genius," for example, it is 221 percent factually based.
We do not know how they produced such unreliable and factually incorrect data, but we are insisting on a full retraction.
The wonderfully named but factually dubious "stoned ape theory" posits that great evolutionary leaps were made when early humans ingested psilocybin.
But one woman whose family found itself on the receiving end of President Donald Trump's factually-challenged ire is speaking out.
We continue to welcome the opportunities to engage in conversations about this project and want to ensure they are factually based.
Now I want to come clean by explaining its origin story, and why it's both factually inaccurate and a political ploy.
Just a tiny bit of research would have revealed the "more than a million" estimate is factually true but profoundly misleading.
Rosenstein denied the Times story as "inaccurate and factually incorrect" in a statement that also blamed anonymous sources promoting personal agendas.
"To know that you have a factually innocent client sitting in jail facing the death penalty is really scary," she said later.
A good sign that Trump's argument on this score doesn't make sense is that he keeps making factually inaccurate assertions about it.
The terms of service specify that posts must be factually true, but if they're not, it's not a problem for the site.
"Kris Jenner Has Trademarked The Word 'Momager' And That Was...A Decade Ago," she wrote as the new, more factually accurate headline.
For some reason you took an unreasoned and factually inaccurate detour in your rant to call A-Rod a bunch of names.
We've debunked quite a few of them here at Factually, including quotes from Gandhi, Walt Disney, Albert Einstein, among plenty of others.
While it is factually true that Jordan committed gross violations during its control of Jerusalem from 4783-2478, Israel was no saint.
Investors did not take too seriously the statement from the president, who is known for his intemperate (and often factually inaccurate) tweets.
In August, key social media platforms — Facebook, YouTube, and Apple News — banned conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his factually challenged site Infowars.
It is important to understand that the FCC's proposed Order is based on a flawed and factually inaccurate understanding of Internet technology.
"The lawsuit is factually inaccurate and legally baseless, and Yale will offer a vigorous defense," a Yale spokesman said in a statement.
He does this not because the stories are factually inaccurate but because he hates that the stories are being reported at all.
I think that there's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct than about being morally right.
The judge partially agreed, calling Silver's case "factually almost nothing like McDonnell," and saying there was "no question" he undertook official acts.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, the majority's only justification for their decision—that Ray filed his claim too late—was factually wrong.
The Health Ministry official said on Monday the court document was "factually correct," without giving further details due to the court proceedings.
Whatever Pence's motive, Scarborough's comparison of his statements today and Nixon's statements during the Watergate scandal are, factually and historically, absolutely right.
This makes it just part of a broader wave of intellectually couched but factually dubious pushback against the liberalization of pot laws.
Despite your best efforts to avoid being condescending, however, you can't help noticing that his opinions seem a bit, well, factually challenged.
Middleton keeps a close eye on Tripadvisor reviews, often responding to criticism from visitors that leadership believes is "factually incorrect," Bussey said.
We know something about the path of the artist's life from contemporary sources, chiefly Giorgio Vasari's fascinating, if factually wonky, mini-biography.
"Despite how it's been portrayed, the memo was fair and factually accurate," Debra Soh wrote in The Globe and Mail in Toronto.
" An impartial, factually-based assessment would have addressed immigration this way: "They're bringing skilled and semi-skilled labor, which we sorely need.
The allegations in the complaint are factually unsupported and without legal merit, and my counsel has submitted a response to the FEC.
Due to the generally low number of shareholders showing up at annual general meetings the two investors can factually block important decisions.
We explained at length that their 'scoop' from unnamed sources was not factually accurate, but they went ahead with the story anyway.
The move comes after Facebook announced it won't take down posts from politicians, even if they're factually inaccurate or violate company guidelines.
Mm-hmm. Because there's nothing that frustrates me more than seeing a journalist publish something on a site that's just factually incorrect.
" They said Manafort's "limited communications cannot be fairly read, either factually or legally, to reflect an intent to corruptly influence a trial witness.
"While President Trump's assessment of HOG's actions in his tweets were often factually inaccurate, the damage has been done," said the BMO report.
The problem is that some top officials continue to make statements that could pave a dubiously legal and factually challenged pathway to war.
By 223, a number of businesses complained that Yelp refused to investigate or remove factually erroneous, and possibly fake, reviews from their pages.
A spokesman for the government has dismissed the idea that such a base motive played any part in its decision as "factually false".
She has carefully anticipated the factually inaccurate arguments that Trump has used on the trail, preparing to fact check him in real time.
On Tuesday, a spokesperson for Virgin Hyperloop One said that the Financial Times story was factually incorrect and claimed it would be changed.
"Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based," Williams tweeted.
" Williams tweeted, "Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based.
"The Deputy Attorney General again rejects Mr. McCabe's recitation of events as inaccurate and factually incorrect," the Justice Department said in a statement.
"Trump's offhand, factually incorrect tweet about Boeing and Air Force One wiped a billion off share value," the actor said in a tweet.
" She also took aim at Trump's claim of unfair media coverage, calling his accusation that the press doesn't show his crowds "factually untrue.
Trump needs to make statements that are factually accurate, offering ideas that make practical sense on the issues that will affect voters' decisions.
We should simply pause to make sure we do it right, particularly when there is compelling evidence that Williams may be factually innocent.
He would go out and make statements that we had to walk back afterwards because he would say things which were factually untrue.
"My stories have always focused on what an institution did, or failed to do, which is something you can factually demonstrate," he says.
" The other side: A DOJ spokesman commented on McCabe's interview, saying Rosenstein "rejects Mr. McCabe's recitation of events as inaccurate and factually incorrect.
Some people tried, declaring Mr. Trump the winner in the discussion of trade even though everything he said was factually or conceptually false.
"President Trump has nominated in Mr. Azar someone who shares his misguided and factually flawed views on the Affordable Care Act," Woohouse said.
But this is factually incorrect, considering that ICWA only applies to federally recognized tribes, each of whom determines their own standards for citizenship.
" He said he deleted the tweets "not because they were factually incorrect but because I should have done a better job weighing in.
If the dots have to be mentally connected in the heads of your audience, then you haven't connected them factually in your piece.
Mark Zuckerberg just addressed a Facebook bug that was blocking factually correct news articles, including stories about coronavirus, for much of Tuesday afternoon.
And while many of Trump's claims during the speech were (as usual) factually questionable, they did provide Stephen Colbert with a major insight.
Mr. Trump had some (factually questionable) thoughts on Thursday's action in the Senate chamber: The Impeachment Briefing is also available as a newsletter.
He sticks to his scare tactics even when he is proven to be factually wrong and despite public rebukes from other world leaders.
Phillips' lawsuit says that was "factually impossible" because district managers could not determine salaried employee compensation due to Starbucks' own policies and procedures.
And basically, what we get is Democrats and Republicans differ wildly in terms of what they think is factually true about the world.
"Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based," Serena said.
Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said in a statement Tuesday that Mueller did not tell Barr that anything in the letter was factually wrong.
Beyond the pale It is well known that the president's infamous tweets are often teeming with assertions that translators know to be factually dubious.
What makes meaningful disagreement with the court order so difficult is that the pro-surveillance side has such a powerful argument legally and factually.
"I don't believe that it is the right thing to ban a person for saying something that is factually incorrect," was his disingenuous response.
Look, I -- I think a lot of the things that Rudy Giuliani said this morning to you were factually, logically almost grotesque at times.
Firmly in the anti-corn camp is Lewis Black, who has a whole (not very factually accurate) bit about the stuff: Phil Lempert, a.k.a.
And it overlaps with his claim (factually false but rhetorically powerful) that he is self-financing his campaign, so not beholden to big money.
But the British car show, for reasons nobody can quite pin down, holds the record for the most watched factually TV show, globally, ever.
" Today, Williams responded, "Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based.
"Pakistan takes exception to the factually incorrect statement issued by U.S. State Dept on today's phone call," a spokesman for the foreign ministry said.
"Suffice it to say that the reporting there is factually wrong," Secretary of State Pompeo said Tuesday, without specifying exactly what he was disputing.
"Given that the case is now before an appellate court, we question the timing of these bizarre, and wholly factually untrue, allegations," he said.
"The Deputy Attorney General again rejects Mr. McCabe's recitation of events as inaccurate and factually incorrect," a spokesperson for the Department of Justice said.
" The Justice Department also issued a statement reiterating Rosenstein's denial of his offer to wear a wire, which Rosenstein called "inaccurate and factually incorrect.
In 2004, the New York Times issued a statement questioning its own reporting on several factually-inaccurate stories that spurred the war in Iraq.
The goal is to instead fight misinformation not only by blocking access, but by promoting educational, informative, and factually accurate posts in its place.
Those two strands of historical narrative — Salem as a site of mass panic, and Salem as witch city — are factually opposed to each other.
She factually rejects the interviewer's attempt to misrepresent Mr. Trump's position on a number of issues, and she is not afraid to do so.
My worry, from the start, is that we would get out over our skis factually with him, which would play right into his hands.
"We believe these claims are not legally or factually supported, and ultimately will not be sustained," Ms. Kupferstein said in a statement on Tuesday.
India's External Affairs Ministry called the comments "factually inaccurate and misleading" and said they seemed "aimed at politicizing the issue," The Associated Press reported.
And — whether in text, visuals or graphics — elevate factually, legally and tonally sensitive stories to your editor and ultimately, if appropriate, to Alix Freedman.
"I think that there's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct than about being morally right," she said.
But what we do know is that even if Mr. Trump's point were factually accurate, it would not foreclose an obstruction of justice charge.
"Paysafe confirms that all material information in the report is either factually inaccurate or has been previously disclosed," the company said in a statement.
Vice President Biden's recent remarks to the House Democratic Caucus that there were no immigrant raids is as alarming as it is factually wrong.
He uses a steady stream of tweets and videos to promote conspiracy theories and factually incorrect claims that he bills as hard-hitting journalism.
I'd argue dog breeds like the pink-nosed pitbull are as similar to pigs as they are to other canines (again spiritually, not factually).
"If separating a child from their guardian is not legally or factually possible, the premise is that the child's interest is decisive," he said.
"The allegations in the complaint are factually unsupported and without legal merit, and my counsel has submitted a response" to the Federal Election Commission.
Thus began my nearly three years of inadequate restaurant reviews, in which I factually described the food, without saying much by way of recommendations.
But sometimes President Trump says something "so factually wrong" in response to an article, that The Times issues a statement standing by its reporting.
"They are deceitful and factually incorrect," said the staffer, who tied the group to a small number of wealthy creditors riled by the bill.
Kocher and Emanuel are also factually wrong to argue that insurers would have done swimmingly in the ACA exchanges if not for Marco Rubio.
Shockingly, this commercial portraying immigrants as hordes intent on coming to America to kill cops and painting Democrats as their accomplices was not factually accurate.
"While President Trump's assessment of HOG's actions in his tweets were often factually inaccurate, the damage has been done," Johnson said in a research note.
In a proceeding Friday, Judge Jennifer Schecter said the records Zervos requested were "factually completely unrelated to her and her claim," according to Courthouse News.
One can imagine constant demands from groups to take down ads as factually misleading, a more sophisticated version of the shout downs on college campus.
Divisive, factually dubious hyperpartisan news sites — allowed to grow mostly unchecked by Facebook — made shady publishers small fortunes while pushing conspiracy theories and fake news.
But these ideas appear to have been shot down, and Google has resisted publicly changing politically charged search results, even when they're downright factually unhelpful.
Tone deaf (vic's fault), factually suspect (jumped out of nowhere) & inappropriate (should have walked up to xwalk; may cite the driver), clearly caused a stir.
The court ruled that these emails did not contain any defamatory information or false information, but rather factually accurate information about her and Shivers' situation.
It's not factually wrong that it's rare, exactly, it's just a very weird and not very meaningful coincidence of the calendar to get excited about.
" The actress' lawyer, Samantha Bley DeJean, said in a statement to PEOPLE Jolie's court filing "was both legally appropriate and factually accurate in all respects.
The reduction of Facebook use also led to more time watching TV alone and also resulted in people being less factually informed about political news.
The fact is that she makes statements that are factually untrue on a regular basis, she makes claims about socialism that are wild and crazy.
Instead, its creators have presented a modern, well-informed, and factually accurate monster movie — it's effective, it's unnerving, and above all else, it's pretty scary.
"The Commission's decision stands on firm ground, both legally and factually, and we expect the Commission to win on appeal," FairSearch lawyer Thomas Vinje said.
Rosenstein said both the Times story and McCabe's account were "inaccurate and factually incorrect," which a Justice Department spokeswoman reiterated after the "60 Minutes" interview.
Krakauer's words can't literally show you the mountain, and readers go into the text knowing that it's drawn from someone's imperfect (and factually disputed) memories.
"Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is leading the Democrat party to the left with nothing more than an unsubstantiated, factually incorrect socialist wish list," the email states.
"I think that there are a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct than about being morally right," she said.
We believe they are not factually supported by the evidence, and we believe that at the end of the process Mr. Weinstein will be exonerated.
This is a complicated case with many grey areas, legally and factually, but today... Mo takes complete responsibility for his unlawful conduct in this case.
Journalists were trying to describe the motivation of the killer, calling it "ISIS-inspired" because they couldn't yet factually label it as an ISIS attack.
I have deleted my Tweets on Cambridge Analytica, not because they were factually incorrect but because I should have done a better job weighing in.
His initial response to the wildfires was to tweet a characteristically nasty and factually dubious statement about how the state should manage its forests better.
Rosenstein said both the Times story and McCabe's account were "inaccurate and factually incorrect," which a Justice Department spokeswoman reiterated after the "60 Minutes" interview.
" An HP spokesman said: "While the Revolve is no longer on the market, it would be factually inaccurate to suggest that's related to product quality.
Indeed, despite the official-sounding imprimatur on the tweets, they were as contradictory and factually dubious as some of his most off-the-cuff remarks.
These days, virtually any attempt at assigning responsibility and accountability at the president's feet — however factually and legally legitimate — is met with howls of outrage.
In an era when hyperpartisan news sources dominate political discourse, fanciful and factually challenged political narratives spread like wildfire, radicalizing millions of Americans' political leanings.
Pictures are, after all, factually malleable vessels that do not present reality as it is but suggest an alternative one as the photographer sees it.
" He called the comparison with Native American struggles in the US "unfortunate propaganda" and "just not factually correct, because Jews are Indigenous to the land.
Finally, after his many factually incorrect claims, Saunders makes a desperate attempt to undermine right-to-work by connecting it to the Jim Crow South.
When a post is determined to be factually false, Facebook's current policy is to reduce the number of times it shows up on News Feeds.
Talento's comments are not new, but they are damaging because they are factually incorrect and have been debunked by respected subject matter experts and researchers.
The aide, Rick Tyler, was asked to resign because he had publicized a factually inaccurate video that purported to show Marco Rubio insulting the Bible.
Their statements are often vague, factually wrong, or incoherent — and typically amount to a giant: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ But that's all overshadowed by the dumb hoax question.
Crucially, however, Porter's research shows that fact-checking can make a reader more factually accurate but that it won't affect their political ideologies or partisanship.
As Donald Jr. became increasingly aggressive on social media in recent years, embracing various politically — and sometimes factually — incorrect memes, she kept a low profile.
It's hard to know whether Facebook sincerely believed that elevating comments with the word "fake" in them would help users determine which stories were factually accurate.
But critics have argued it hasn't done enough to clamp down on harassment, amid calls that Twitter and Facebook referee more posts that are factually incorrect.
I can't back this up factually, but I'd wager that at least 75% of people that are attracted to men have a huge crush on him.
BETSY WOODRUFF, POLITICAL REPORTER, THE DAILY BEAST: For Republicans to act like Maxine Waters has taken the discourse to a new low is just factually inaccurate.
If a reporter or source uses all-caps or uses explicit language in reporting, you probably shouldn't be counting on them to be completely factually correct.
Australia's Education Minister Simon Birmingham said the two issues were not linked while non-government organization Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the ad was factually inaccurate.
He was widely criticized for spending most of his time with Clinton on her email scandal, while allowing Trump to skate by on factually dubious claims.
She clarified to Cooper that being factually correct is "absolutely important" and said that when she makes a mistake she admits it and restates her point.
" A person familiar with the DOJ discussions at the time said the suggestion of approval by the deputy attorney general's office is "factually and legally mistaken.
The Hill recently published a piece by Shireen Qudosi, a self-professed "Muslim Reformer" with a history of making factually incorrect and offensive statements about Islam.
Our political conversations are unmoored from the history of totalitarian regimes in the twentieth century: factually, ideologically, and in the field of empathy with the dead.
We believe that they are not factually supported by the evidence, and we believe that at the end of the process Mr. Weinstein will be exonerated.
Factually, the FBI conducted a study and found that out of the over 12 million people arrested in 2012, only 85033 percent were for violent crimes.
I would suggest "stupid news," meaning that, even if the story is factually accurate, you would have to be stupid to think it was worth reporting.
Plus, the idea that there are special types of orgasms and a hierarchy built around them is factually incorrect, and there's even science to prove it.
British war comics seem to be quite factually accurate, based on actual battles and realistic drawings, whereas American ones tend to be a lot more fanciful.
"The drafters of the new regime — the one under which Mueller operates — set themselves firmly against the revolutionary principle of factually rich prosecutorial reports," he wrote.
Summarizing the companies' generally contemptuous point of view, a Chevron spokesman called the suit "factually and legally meritless" and said it would benefit only special interests.
"The S.E.C.'s complaint is legally and factually flawed, and Volkswagen will contest it vigorously," the company said in a statement responding to the commission's suit.
Professional historians have a continued lively debate among themselves as to whether or not, factually speaking, Reconstruction could have been successfully pursued under different political leadership.
"The White House Counsel's Office agreed that it was factually wrong to say that the Department of Justice had initiated Comey's termination," according to the report.
Even in their original sentencing submission, the prosecutors cited factually similar (though arguably less serious) cases resulting in sentences ranging from only six to 23 months.
But if they want their ideas to be taken seriously, then they must make more persuasive and factually-based arguments for the validity of those ideas.
Their understandings of that conversation is that there was a clear directive that there was a quid pro quo factually from the conduct, from the actions.
Asked whether he was saying the 10 boys who accused Sandusky of the sexual assault were liars, Lindsay said only that their testimony was factually inaccurate.
And it is factually correct — but these figures don't tell you how the wage gap varies across industries or what could be done to fix it.
This difference will show up at the debate, allowing Clinton to give factually defensible and politically tenable answers to a range of questions on weighty matters.
" Williams shot back on Twitter saying, "Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based.
It doesn't help his recap of Deja's call does factually sound like a complete nothing of an emergency Randall used continue holding onto his ex foster daughter.
EU communications director Andy Wigmore, has said Banks' lawsuit was about preventing Cadwalladr from continuing "to make assertions which are factually far-fetched and just not true."
When everyone agrees the cover is factually wrong the elite media can have a better sense why so many Americans are sick of the dishonesty and falsehoods.
Kaitlyn: I like it when Kyle says "I ain't frowned since '06 / I ain't cried since '01" and I wish those statements were factually accurate about me.
With fake news reports and factually dubious tweets clouding the U.S. media atmosphere, readers are searching for a voice of reason to cut through all the noise.
Throughout Patani Semasa a range of social roles for the artist are depicted — ranging from a more factually-based, artist-as-journalist role, to the poetic storyteller.
Clinton's assertion was "factually incorrect" because his plans to overhaul the health insurance market would be implemented by the federal government in states whose governors opposed it.
"The only thing in the Gianforte statement that is factually correct is my name and my place of employment," Jacobs said on ABC's "Good Morning America" Thursday.
Very little has changed factually since then, so any hopes for merger approval would necessarily need to rest on the changed political situation in the United States.
"We do a lot of tweaking of how Alexa responds to a variety of questions, both culturally and factually, as time goes on," said the Amazon's spokesperson.
Despite his factually incorrect brags about passing major legislation, he has yet to sign any major bill even with the GOP controlling the House and the Senate.
Some of the tactics include posting factually incorrect articles, using fake accounts to spread information and spreading "disinformation," manipulated or inaccurate facts to bolster a certain position.
A rep for the brand declined to comment on the confusion, but did mention that the news originated from "Page Six gossip" and was not factually correct.
The problem isn't that the jokes are factually "wrong," it's that even when well-delivered, they feel generic, at a time when politics have never been weirder.
It's not just that a sitting head of state made offensive and factually incorrect comments about the Holocaust (he underestimated the number of Jews murdered by half).
But the problem with the current effort is that, while it might be legally strong, it seems on the face of the indictment to be factually weak.
"Last Chance U is a new six-hour docu-series from Netflix about junior college football in small rural Mississippi" is a factually correct thing to say.
The team at Buzzfeed broke the story when they noticed that Tila had tweeted a particularly racist, rude, and factually incorrect tweet about Lopez on May 30.
Trump's claim that Mueller "worked for Obama for 8 years" is factually incorrect — he served as FBI director for eight years under Bush, and four under Obama.
They are telling them that their most deeply felt beliefs about the world and about their fellow Americans are not only factually correct, but also morally righteous.
Fewer than half of the states require sexual education in public schools, and only 20 of them even require that it be medically, factually or technically accurate.
On Saturday, the South China Morning Post, which is owned by Alibaba, quoted a spokesman saying the Times' report was factually inaccurate, and taken out of context.
"I have deleted my Tweets on Cambridge Analytica, not because they were factually incorrect but because I should have done a better job weighing in," he tweeted.
During an on-camera interview with RollingOut, Paul said Truth Be Told is particularly relevant because of its central message about the importance of being factually correct.
Pai's remarks, therefore, are not only factually inaccurate but give credence to Wiener's claim that the FCC is acting in the best interest of telecom and cable companies.
" The National Association of Hispanic Journalists, which criticized Brokaw's comments as factually incorrect, said "his position bolsters stereotypes that U.S. Hispanics are all foreigners, prejudiced as the 'others.
And as if that weren't enough, in a press conference with the Italian president shortly after, Trump continued his factually challenged Syria rant with yet another false statement.
Some noted the insensitivity of his tweet in the wake of multiple deaths and homelessness while others asserted that he is factually incorrect regarding the causes of wildfires.
In terms of factually what she would need to show is that there was copyright management information on the photos when they got to whomever is distributing them.
At face value something can sound so bizarre or jarring, but through the power of lyric and song resonates with facets of experience difficult to describe more factually.
While responding to an audience member who expressed concern over how the American Health Care Act would affect Medicaid recipients, Labrador made a shocking, and factually flawed, statement.
I learned that what I believed about myself (and the universe) was not only factually incorrect, but was also only hurting me and the people close to me.
Behind the scenes, Elizabeth Holmes has been telling employees a sunnier, more factually-challenged version of the Theranos situation, which is perhaps past the point of no return.
Jeremy Clarkson thought himself bigger than Top Gear, and the (seemingly) inevitable downfall of his successor would support the idea that he was right — factually if not morally.
In other words, even something that is factually impossible can be logically possible, and how closely that logic is followed will affect how plausible a supernatural being seems.
For its part, Texas Instruments confirmed the bugs and issued several patches, but attacked Armis' findings, calling its report "factually unsubstantiated and potentially misleading," said spokesperson Nicole Bernard.
His family initially slammed Freeh's report as "factually wrong," though this summer they dropped their lawsuit against the NCAA over actions the organization took based on Freeh's findings.
Many aspects of the investigation are factually and legally interconnected: they involve overlapping courses of conduct, relationships, and events, and they rely on similar sources, methods, and techniques.
The mission will be to "push back on factually inaccurate reporting in the media" and look for reports in the press that contain "glaring inaccuracies," the email says.
Chris comes on every time and says things that are just factually incorrect and he expects the whole audience to believe him because he worked for Senator Schumer.
The role of his entirely superfluous communications staff at this point is to spin whatever Trump says into something less factually inaccurate or offensive on the taxpayer's dime.
"Overall, the Arbitrator finds that the grounds cited for Ms. Katelnikoff's dismissal are factually inaccurate and unfounded," Maureen Flynn, the arbitrator in the case, wrote in her decision.
They sound similar factually obviously, but under the law they're far less serious, and are obviously no longer alleging that Mr. Alaradi has any connection whatsoever to terrorism.
If you primarily trust one news outlet and that news outlet is telling a very different -- and factually challenged -- version of current events, a massive disconnect is created.
" Raveesh Kumar, a spokesman for India's Ministry of External Affairs, said the commission's criticisms were "factually inaccurate and misleading, and appear to be aimed at politicizing the issue.
Wrapped inside that insult, which was widely established as a racist trope, was a factually inaccurate claim: Only one of the lawmakers was born outside the country. 23.
You decide whether the person is credible, whether there's other reasons to believe what they're saying, whether anything they've said factually matches up with something in public record.
And Coffee points out, "You can make a factually incorrect statement without it being criminal," for example, if Trump did not know about the additional payments beyond $130,000.
Before long, it morphed into an entirely factually incorrect meme blaming Monsanto for microcephaly that was shared by millions of Facebook and Twitter users, including actor George Takei.
They are also pumping out lines about Saudi Arabia's long and important relationship with the United States, which, while factually correct, conflates the kingdom with the Crown Prince.
I'd say cluing U.S. puzzles is much easier overall, but the emphasis is on a desire to making sure the clue set is varied, inclusive and factually correct.
Wrapped inside that insult, which was widely established as a racist trope, was a factually inaccurate claim: Only one of the lawmakers was born outside the country. 23.
Though purporting to be "experts" on Islam, these individuals presented heavily biased and often factually inaccurate information to the public that often veered into outright bigotry and conspiracy theories.
"Given the heavy weight of evidence in the record that glyphosate is not in fact known to cause cancer, the required warning is factually inaccurate and controversial," Shubb wrote.
Oculus remains committed to appealing the verdict, and a spokesperson for the company reiterated its position to Reuters calling the outcome of the trial ""legally flawed and factually unwarranted.
"Fake news" is a vague term that has evolved into a catch-all phrase for conspiracy theories, satire, factually inaccurate reports, and statements Trump and other politicians disagree with.
The results suggest false news on Twitter may be able to change minds, move markets and influence behavior more powerfully than factually accurate news written by credible, trained journalists.
If that sounds like too low of a bar, it's because we all know, factually, that decent people don't want to have sex with people who aren't into it.
J&J in a statement called the allegations "legally and factually unfounded" and noted the drugs are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and carry warning labels.
Examples of good pressure were said to include incentives toward decent behavior—"being honest helps people trust you," one reads in a factually accurate if not exactly revelatory statement.
Morgan initially took issue with a seemingly cavalier diagnosis of PTSD: he claims this illness is exclusive to people who served in the military, something that is factually wrong.
" Mr. Cuomo took the same tack, telling reporters the next day, "We have the advantage of knowing it is factually not true, because Pat Foye did not stand down.
Pretending we can deport 11 million people, or build a wall without spending tens of billions of dollars of taxpayer money is abetting what is really just factually incorrect.
" MacArthur — who has bashed the CBO score as "factually inaccurate" — offered some advice to his colleagues: "I think lawmakers should focus on what we've done to fix the problem.
But the more people know about how to prevent its spread — whether they acquire that knowledge through targeted information seeking or a lighthearted but factually correct game — the better.
All in all, it's been a kind of greatest hits of his favorite, factually challenged remarks — with more likely to come in his address to Congress on Tuesday night.
"Edward Snowden is no hero—he's a traitor who willfully betrayed his colleagues and his country," Nunes said in a release accompanying the committee's factually flawed report on Snowden.
The court is factually right on that point, at least: If you want to find religious discrimination in Trump's stump speeches or campaign promises, you don't have to look far.
This report indicates that the president did not conspire with the Russians and did not obstruct justice — or at least that obstruction would be difficult legally and factually to prove.
The second draft law would give authorities the power to block websites if they fail to comply with requests to remove information that the state deems to be factually inaccurate.
Smart Compose is currently only available in English, and Google gives fair warning that "Smart Compose is not designed to provide answers and may not always predict factually correct information."
Yet the president-elect does seem to have an affinity for factually murky stories bolstered by opinion, circumstantial evidence, and hearsay that appear generally supportive of his most controversial statements.
"We believe that the allegations in the complaint are wholly without merit and the suit is both factually and legally deficient," MonoSol Rx CEO Keith Kendall said in a statement.
But to lump half of Trump voters together into a "basket of deplorables" and attack voters who support Trump as a class was morally wrong, factually inaccurate and politically stupid.
Although factually, both programs do serve low-income communities, there is a race to the image of a welfare recipient and a race to the image of a college student.
I gave them many names of women I helped-refused to use One of the reporters later called that tweet "factually inaccurate," saying women suggested by Trump's office were interviewed.
Contrast that with the United States, which under Trump has regularly issued factually shaky, belligerent statements on Iran and subsequently buried or reversed them under an avalanche of new statements.
Amazon said in a statement that the Journal's report was not factually accurate, and that Amazon has not changed the criteria it uses to rank search results to include profitability.
So Mr. Brown, a Democrat, had to file charges that were factually and tactically defensible while still being seen as answering the neighborhood's anxious call as firmly as he could.
His election slogan was "Rome wasn't built in a day," which while factually correct lacked the kind of big-thinking and positivity that people were after in inter-war Britain.
The letter from Sanders' team accused The Post of both factually incorrect reporting in the medical bankruptcy piece, and of not covering Sanders in a "fair, professional and ethical" manner.
This was also done by the Clinton administration, so it would constitute a perfectly viable slam on Clinton's record if Trump wanted to bother to make a factually defensible claim.
The soliloquy can be written factually, using the explicit conditions, events, characters and plot of the book and character they have selected, or the real-life figure they have chosen.
"PragerU's allegations were meritless, both factually and legally, and the court's ruling vindicates important legal principles that allow us to provide different choices and settings to users," the person said.
Physician-patient confidentiality rules complicate options for doctors, Goldman says, but they can respond to factually incorrect reviews if the patient agrees to waive confidentiality and publicly discuss the case.
EPA must explain why some new means to regulate power plant greenhouse gas emissions is legally and factually sound in comparison to the Clean Power Plan and its past reasoning.
We do not know how they produced such unreliable and factually incorrect data, but we are insisting on a full retraction [...] This report is wrong and it must be corrected.
The FCC has had three different major policy efforts reversed by the courts in as many months for being factually unsound, something that looms large over the net neutrality debate.
If you're going to do those things, you need to be able to explain why it's OK. But you cannot factually say that Trump didn't ask Zelensky to investigate Biden.
But the most factually egregious passage, by far, is the one where he discusses what's known about journalist and US resident Jamal Khashoggi and who is responsible for his murder.
Because the content of the bogus calls was factually correct, their inauthenticity hardly seems consequential, especially given how long the buyer took to make an offer and close on the property.
Blackburn said that she has personally been affected by the network's new policy with "factually incorrect ads" run against her but she argued that free speech should be the top priority.
The Berlin terrorist attack in December was reported factually and without panic; frothing reactions in the Anglo-Saxon press (and on Mr Trump's Twitter feed) contrasting with the stoical mood here.
This peek into how our own minds work proves just how difficult it can be to convince someone that they are being hurtful or what they are saying is factually inaccurate.
In rare public comments on behalf of the Sacklers, White told me why the family believed the litigation against them and their company is legally dubious, factually misleading and politically motivated.
Ramaphosa's office said it was unfortunate that Mkhwebane seemed to have not taken into account his response to her preliminary findings, which he described as "deficient both factually and in law".
Yes, he tweeted lukewarm praise—though with the cavet that the bill was open for "negotiation"—but he seemed more interested in continuing to level factually inaccurate smears against Barack Obama.
"While DHS has discussed the need for potential assistance with force protection of CBP personnel, calling this line of support 'law enforcement activities' would be factually inaccurate," the DHS official said.
They maintain that the waiting period deprives Satanists of bodily autonomy and that the "informed consent booklet," which contains factually incorrect information, undermines their rational and scientific understanding of the world.
The company's news reporting has been ridiculed as factually-dubious on a good day, and the deal's impact on discourse and competition has raised alarm bells among Republicans and Democrats alike.
Under Mr. Rubin's auspices, "Killing Lincoln," the best-selling book Mr. O'Reilly would write alongside Martin Dugard, soared and created a series of popular (if sometimes deeply factually flawed) history books.
I would comb the Daily Mail showbiz sidebar, the National Enquirer, and pick quotes from these aforementioned factually ambiguous emails to put together an ideas list for the editors in meetings.
They provide a crucial counter to the factually vacuous anti-vaccine campaign, which is being waged not only on social media platforms like Facebook, but also in statehouses across the country.
"Factually, the guy has been a huge friend to the Jewish state," said Mr. Bennett, who serves as Israel's minister for diaspora affairs, at the Council on Foreign Relations on Wednesday.
The ethos of the C.I.A. and other intelligence agencies is that officers should look at the world as it is, assessing developments factually, and not through an ideological or political lens.
Meanwhile, Lega has been told off by the European institutions for blaming the incident on the lack of funding from the EU, which the institution has proven to be factually incorrect.
In his order, Judge Korman not only shaved time off the sentence, but also castigated the government for its "implausible, contradictory and factually unsupported reasons" for opposing the lighter prison term.
Add to that, Fox News has been caught spreading its own version of "fake news," airing statements that are factually wrong or straight-up lies, as determined by nonpartisan fact checkers.
Everyone turns to the internet to google questions they're too embarrassed to ask out loud, so we wanted a central source of truth that was backed by medically and factually accurate information.
The other, a website from The History Channel, might be upsetting due to subject matter but is a "factually accurate source of historical information" and doesn't promote the hateful content mentioned above.
The court of appellation ordered Morawiecki to broadcast a statement before the evening news on two major TV stations admitting he was factually wrong in claims about his administration's road infrastructure program.
There are things that I, Tonya gets right — if emotionally rather than factually — especially when it comes to the demands that are put on the poor in a world that scorns them.
Calling the charges against Weinstein "factually unsubstantiated," Brafman also said he predicted that a jury would not believe the women who have made these allegations against his client, according to the Times.
"There's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct than about being morally right," @AOC says in response to criticism that she's made factual errors. https://t.
He is He. He is the breakout star of 2017, and one of the few people who could factually say that the past 12 months have been the best of his life.
"Any suggestion by opponents of the president's policies that senior [DHS] intelligence officials would politicize this process or a report's final conclusions is absurd and not factually accurate," Christensen told the Journal.
Rosenstein previously called the Times report "factually incorrect," and has not commented further on claims that he discussed wearing a wire and to secretly record the president's conversations with other top officials.
The New Jersey Republican cited his opponent's attacks alleging he's supportive of an age tax on Social Security and would cut Medicare, both of which he says are misleading and factually inaccurate.
" LendingClub called the allegations "legally and factually unwarranted," and said in a statement that "it intends to oppose the claims and work towards an early resolution of the matter in Federal Court.
Factually, the case addresses PHH Corporation's appeal of a 85033 fine imposed on the company for systematically violating the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) repeatedly over a significant period of time.
The group accused FCC Chairman Ajit Pai of structuring the repeal proposal on a "flawed and factually inaccurate understanding" of the internet and for not holding public hearings on scrapping the rules.
But she protests that journalists shouldn't use the word "lie" just because it's "factually accurate" that a lie has taken place: That said, I think The Times should use this term rarely.
"That whole story — which is the most factually accurate of all the material in the film, strangely enough — really moved into the realm to me of a '60s spy film," Soderbergh said.
In a court filing, Musk asked a judge to throw out the case by arguing that his July 2018 tweet calling Unsworth a "pedo guy" was not meant to be taken factually.
There is real merit to this argument — not all the content that some people might consider false is factually so, and in some cases, the falsehood is more a matter of opinion.
"They may expend more effort on cases in which they believe their client is factually innocent," Professors Song Richardson and Philip Atiba Goff wrote in a 2013 article for the Yale Law Journal.
Even double-barreled hyphenations won't necessarily destroy your word limit, and acknowledging collaboration and co-authorship is not only generous — it's historically and factually accurate, which is a minimum standard for serious writing.
There's a crucial need to hold bad actors and tech platforms more accountable for the spread of misinformation, but prison time for a factually incorrect YouTube video is clearly not a viable solution.
Schilling's social media accounts are littered with evolutionary truthering, racist, and factually inaccurate memes—most famously, Schilling wondered aloud about the staggering gibberish comparing Muslims to Nazis—and he did it again yesterday.
As I pointed out on Twitter, before realizing that every PhD in my feed had beat me to it, the idea that Middle East conflicts "date back millennia" is straight-up factually wrong.
They're engineered to show us things we are statistically likely to want to see, content that people similar to us have found engaging—even if it's stuff that's factually unreliable or potentially harmful.
But once a woman steps into the facility she is presented with factually inaccurate and misleading information, often by untrained staff pretending to be medical personnel, to dissuade her from pursuing an abortion.
"He's not only trying to sink his own party's presumptive nominee, but he's factually incorrect and he's making the same unfair attack on Trump that was launched against him in 28503," he wrote.
"A claim reported this evening by a major U.S. newspaper that the U.S. military is developing plans to keep nearly 1,000 U.S. troops in Syria is factually incorrect," Dunford said in a statement.
Brown and other Facebook employees claim the company should not be responsible for deciding which politically ads are factually correct, comparing the stance to the broadcast standards used by TV and radio stations.
"A claim reported this evening by a major U.S. newspaper that the U.S. military is developing plans to keep nearly 28503,22019 U.S. troops in Syria is factually incorrect," Dunford said in a statement.
Even if Trump made factually correct comments to Mueller, he could still face legal peril if his statements failed to harmonize with FBI "trust me on what I heard" memos containing contrary assertions.
He's long complained that smaller nations don't pay the same membership dues and spend the same portion of money on defense as the US, a factually dubious claim that has been checked repeatedly.
"He's not only trying to sink his own party's presumptive nominee, but he's factually incorrect and he's making the same unfair attack on Trump that was launched against him in 85033," he wrote.
In a statement, Herbalife said it believed many of the FTC's conclusions were "factually incorrect" but believed the settlement was the best course of action given the prospect of lengthy and costly litigation.
Still, even some in Mr. Trump's orbit acknowledge that this campaign season has brought out a torrent of untruths that, they worry, distracts from a record he should be proud to outline factually.
The president's office answered on Friday that the accusation was "deficient both factually and in law," and said that a formal response provided by Mr. Ramaphosa's lawyers had not been given sufficient consideration.
Then, she departed, handing the tangled knot that is Brexit to Mr. Johnson, a former journalist whose factually deficient reports from Brussels decades ago helped turn the British public against the European Union.
When a reporter pointed out that he had "stood in the way" of preventing a shutdown in 2013, Cruz responded it was "factually incorrect and a wonderful media narrative" that he did that.
Gaetz has also become a regular fixture on Trump's preferred communication medium -- cable TV -- where he has delivered the sort of unapologetic (and factually unfounded) attacks that please the President to no end.
"Chicago will continue to stand up proudly as a welcoming city, and we will not cave to the Trump administration's pressure because they are wrong morally, wrong factually and wrong legally," Emanuel said.
For example, the Supreme Court held that a company's First Amendment freedom of petition gave it the right to file a factually well-grounded lawsuit even if its motive for filing was retaliation.
J. Erik Connolly, the company's external litigation counsel in Chicago, wrote in an email that the accusations against Sulitzer are factually inaccurate, and will be proven false in the course of the process.
"I have to repeat that China is factually interfering in Taiwan's election, and it happens every day," Taiwan's president, Tsai Ing-wen, said on Tuesday as she officially launched a re-election campaign.
"What would be most helpful would be say is, it is the world's premier law enforcement agency, it's had a rough 18 months, [but] we're gonna get to the bottom factually," Gowdy said.
But Trump's disturbing, detailed, and factually dubious description of women being kidnapped — a description that's become a staple of his case for the border wall — elicited an uncomfortable reaction from many people online.
A Facebook where credible news organizations compete for space with inflammatory, partisan, but not-totally-factually-wrong pieces might still result in a user base where everyone is trapped in their respective echo chamber.
Factually speaking, Ruth Bader Ginsburg was correct in her three recent interviews published Tuesday — with the New York Times, the Associated Press and CNN — where the Supreme Court justice took Donald Trump to task.
What happened: Trump attacked four young, female House Democrats of color who are U.S. citizens, three of whom were born in the U.S. — "a racist trope ... factually inaccurate," as the N.Y. Times put it.
I like how he's able to simultaneously (a) deride Thai boxing style, (b) point out his strengths, and (c) completely dismiss most of his opponents not only as inferior, but objectively, scientifically, factually outdated.
But he has the typical engineer's view that the problems caused by technology can be solved by—you guessed it—more and better technology, such as AIs that learn to suppress factually incorrect information.
"Our country's a poor country," Trump says, which is factually untrue but a necessary premise in order to justify a foreign policy that makes maximizing revenue, rather than protecting global capitalism, the main goal.
And, because algorithms are not perfect, they repeatedly goofed up, allowing fake news stories to spread across the network by highlighting factually inaccurate links that were going viral as well as other inappropriate content.
However, in court this week U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer said FedEx was "factually innocent" and had offered to cooperate with the government during its investigation, according to the Recorder, a California legal publication.
When asked why they didn't vaccinate, 57 percent gave a reason that is factually inaccurate, like the belief that vaccines increase the chances of having serious side effects, or that vaccines are not necessary.
The controversy started in April, when the Daily News reported that an art teacher at the school, Ju Ling Wei, had shown her fifth-grade class a disturbing and factually inaccurate anti-abortion video.
You might remember the factually misguided "death panel" attack on the Affordable Care Act, which preyed on discomfort with a governmental role in deciding what health care would or would not be paid for.
What I didn't like: It is frustrating that at each debate candidates come with studies or articles that factually contradict each other but the moderators and news media can't tell us who is correct.
The stories that Hartman lifts from this mix and for which she crafts wings allows them to soar with the possibilities that we know — intuitively, if not factually — lived in their minds and hearts.
Trump's claim that Obama "founded" ISIS is factually wrong: ISIS was originally formed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and has a long, complicated history that Obama and Clinton were largely not a part of.
The BBC match report thought it was "controversial", the Daily Mail called it "dubious", while the Guardian simply noted that "Suarez went down" to win the penalty, which is factually correct while slim on detail.
Trump began calm and scored by criticizing trade agreements, but then began repeatedly interrupting Clinton and making numerous factually inaccurate statements such as claiming he opposed the Iraq War — which moderator Lester Holt firmly debunked.
"I will also add that there were several agencies briefed with information during that time and some of the information that went out was not factually accurate," Chicago Police Department's Anthony Guglielmi told ABC News.
But the problem for Trump is not that he is being illogical or factually inaccurate: it's that he is misjudging the political value of taking credit for the soaring stock market in the first place.
The third question is whether American prosecutors might amend the indictment to make it legally and factually stronger and, if they did so, whether they would take such action before or after he was extradited.
Blindness is factually a handicap, yet an empathetic one, because other people can so easily imagine themselves suffering from it, sometimes even experiencing a rehearsal for it when stumbling through a darkened house at night.
The whole reason we even started having a social media presence was because there were so many fake social media pages of us and so many news articles and blog posts that were factually inaccurate.
The real Justice Ginsburg has said that the only thing the movie gets factually wrong is that it portrays her at a momentary loss for words as she addresses the court for the first time.
Instead, it causes people to develop the nonhypocritical — but factually unlikely — view that accusations leveled against the other party's politicians are true, while those leveled against your own party are part of a broad conspiracy.
The president instead directed the crowd to his usual potpourri of factually dubious claims about Democratic policies, lingering on the fear-first immigration messaging his White House hopes to harness in time for the elections.
On Sunday,  The South China Morning Post quoted an Alibaba spokesman saying that a published report by The New York Times declaring that Ma planned to retire was factually inaccurate, and taken out of context.
The Speaker and her California colleague defended the whistleblower, who is weighing whether or how to speak to Congress after being publicly attacked by Trump as partisan, factually incorrect and a "spy" who merits punishment.
In questioning Ohr, lawmakers Elijah Cummings and Jerrold Nadler said, Republicans were selective about his communications with Steele to create "a highly misleading narrative with factually inaccurate interpretations and conjecture" that they were discussing Trump.
" Visser's prominent Philadelphia-based lawyer, Theodore Simon, echoed that, telling PEOPLE: "It is clear from Monday's 11-hour court hearing, the charges against my client Luke Visser are both factually and legally unfounded, unwarranted and unjustified.
"Like all Americans, we are concerned about the unprecedented humanitarian crisis at our Southern border; we acknowledge the challenge, but we are appalled by the historically and factually inaccurate portrayal of our facilities," a statement said.
When we catch ourselves sharing a factually problematic headline just because it "[feels] so right," as LeJacq described it, it can be unclear whether truth even matters in the face of our desire to express ourselves.
Kellyanne Conway may regularly provide factually untrue propaganda that justifies some of the worst acts of the Trump administration — but McKinnon's impression of her is one of the great gifts of the SNL season so far.
In the interests of transparency and in response to some factually incorrect allegations made by United Voices of the World, we wish to confirm that all our employees are paid hourly rates which are legally compliant.
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Friday the anti-corruption watchdog's finding that he deliberately misled parliament about donations to his party election campaign was "unfortunate" and "deficient both factually and in law".
MUMBAI (Reuters) - India has defended its right to grant licenses allowing local firms to override patents and make cheaper copies of drugs discovered by big Western drugmakers, and said reports to the contrary were "factually incorrect".
While some criticism has been disproportionate to the offense—Weiss's tweet was factually wrong, but written with good intentions—the op-ed page hasn't quite lived up to Bennet's high-minded call for freshness and diversity.
Last month, Tianhe said media reports claiming financial irregularities had been uncovered at the company and that the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) had directed a trading halt of the stock were "factually incorrect and misleading".
"We can now factually, say that Tesla's executive turnover appears to be high relative to peers, and extremely high in terms of its senior-most executives in the direct line of fire of Musk," Bernstein said.
When the president responded to last week's militant attack in Barcelona with a factually inaccurate reference expressing support for rumored U.S. abuses against Muslims following the Philippine-American War of 1899 - 1902, few were even surprised.
Read more: Jeffrey Epstein was a featured 'Bachelor of the Month' seeking 'a cute Texas girl' in a 1980 issue of CosmopolitanThe rest of the Page Six qualifications for Epstein's "stud" status are seemingly factually correct.
With a topic as politically divisive as climate change, imprecise language and factually incorrect statements not only provide easy targets for the other side but also hinder conversations focused on building a consensus around real solutions.
On Tuesday, Musk tweeted factually incorrect information saying he was "excited" to work with Goldman Sachs and Silver Lake as financial advisors for Tesla, when neither one officially signed an agreement with Musk to do so.
"With dialogue taken directly from the report, The Mueller Report Illustrated is a vivid, factually rigorous narrative of a crucial period in Trump's presidency that remains relevant to the turbulent events of today," the description says.
It was only three days after Facebook decided to fire the team that Facebook's algorithm promoted a factually inaccurate story claiming then-Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly was kicked out of the company for backing Hillary Clinton.
" When I question a particularly fanciful cause of death, she says, "One of the most factually accurate events to happen in the book is a thing that happened in Boston called the Great Molasses Flood of 1919.
Not only are the requests' claims that the article links to illegal content factually incorrect, but the screenshots used are clearly providing supporting evidence for the news story by showing the watermarks present in the video files.
"Famously, when a guy in a bar, half-drunk, said that John Adams had a fat ass -- which is also factually true -- the guy was put in jail," Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Edward J. Larson told CNN.
The more in-depth analysis is usually left to a select few news outlets—but inevitably, factually accurate stories are less interesting than the press release or come out after the hype train has left the station.
AND WHEN WE AT GRANT'S, WE ARE CRITICS OF MANY THINGS, AND WHEN WE MOUNT ANALYSIS, WE OUGHT TO DO SO WITH EVERY SINGLE L FACT THAT CAN BE FACTUALLY DETERMINED YOU KNOW, ON, CHECKED AND SCRUBBED.
"A claim reported this evening by a major U.S. newspaper that the U.S. military is developing plans to keep nearly 22019,000 U.S. troops in Syria is factually incorrect," the Joint Staff account tweeted on behalf of Dunford.
In a statement Sunday, Smith argued that the Times's report, published earlier in the day, was "distorted and factually incorrect" and ignored the "$2628 billion of capital" that FedEx supposedly "invested in the U.S. economy" in 28503.
These allergens, although factually harmless, lead prone immune systems to overreact, producing a glut of histamines that can cause irritation in localized areas, or in extreme causes lead to full-body reactions and life-threatening airway closures.
A search for more factually accurate information about slavery and African-American history in Georgia is what led Jason Lumpkin, a pastor in Atlanta, to the Owens-Thomas House with his wife and two daughters in March.
The enormous impact of America's secondary sanctions comes not just from the market power of the United States, but also from the power of the dollar and America's capacity to legally or factually control financial transaction systems.
But this week, Facebook is facing a new critique of its ad policy: The issue is "factually inaccurate advertisements which suggest negative health effects of Truvada PrEP," according to a letter published Monday on GLAAD&aposs website.
"I do think that negative commentary surrounding the game that is not factually supported can have an impact on attendance — assertions about clubs not trying to win and the like, I think that's not helpful," he said.
The intent is to draw a contrast with Donald Trump by presenting her credentials as a tough, fact-based prosecutor against a factually challenged president who has been under a legal cloud for much of his presidency.
There followed on Day 22010 a vintage Charles Addams book of cartoons and, next, a copy of the 22001 "Hollywood Babylon," Kenneth Anger's lascivious (and factually dubious) account of the inhabitants of Tinseltown and their sordid antics.
In March, it finally instructed human quality raters — who manually evaluate web pages to train the Search algorithm — to flag offensive and factually incorrect material, which Search could then downgrade for users seeking general information about a topic.
"He's got 20 million followers, so it's not as though a company could dismiss the impact of that reach, and I think if something is factually incorrect a brand should definitely correct it," she told CNBC by phone.
One teacher instructed his students who were hoping for a better score when retaking the test to include advanced vocabulary like "myriad" and "plethora," minute details (whether or not they were factually accurate), and quotes from historical figures.
Smallwood said that it was "not apparent from the video ... but factually undisputed" that Hambrick was armed with a 9mm Beretta pistol and that he refused to drop it despite Delke's repeated verbal commands to drop his weapon.
"I am left with the inconsistent and factually inaccurate statements of a person who I now understand does not want to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," she said, according to the publication.
Instead, the president chose to retweet the factually incorrect analysis of a 25-year-old conservative activist in the US who is quite well known for his magical ability to detect hidden whiffs of socialism wherever he goes.
In a statement obtained by Reuters, Pakistan's foreign ministry called the U.S. record of the call "factually incorrect" and asserts that the two men did not discuss militants operating on Pakistani soil, the existence of which Pakistan denies.
By factually assessing his situation in the present, he was able to accept that his old story was "expired" and replace it with the more accurate understanding of his life, in which he is a financially stable adult.
In advance of the speech, the White House reportedly decided to for once worry about what media fact-checkers would say and consequently tried harder than usual to keep Trump on script and limited to factually accurate assertions.
Progressives shouldn't go down the Fox News road and start adopting their own factually weak or outright false conspiracy theories, like those involving Barack Obama's birthplace, voter fraud, Uranium One, George Soros, Solyndra and on and on. 3.
" He took -- and seems to take -- the 'Axis of Evil' line literally Rewind to August 2002 and remarks made during talks between the North and South Koreans, when Bolton defended the expression and insisted "it was factually correct.
Unsworth's representatives also used the filing to state that the investigator's information was factually incorrect, noting that their client met his partner, Woranan "Tik" Ratrawiphukkun, to whom he is not legally married, in 20183 when she was 32.
As president of S.H. Bell Co., a small family-owned and -operated warehousing and logistics company, I must respond to the extremely inflammatory and factually incorrect March 8 opinion piece written by John O'Grady, U.S. EPA union president.
Aaron Sorkin's best script, a dolphin-skin-smooth nightmare, and Jesse Eisenberg's best performance, megalomaniacal paranoia at its most delicious, nailed (spiritually, if not entirely factually) Facebook's slippery origins and presaged its assaults on privacy, democracy, and consciousness.
I felt it was a little passe and I worry that, not worry, but it feels like white heterosexual men have become generally accepted oppressors in our society and I wonder if that's a- Which is factually true.
Dan: This looks like the rando who jumps into your mentions to lecture you with a six-tweet response about why your joke about Star Wars was factually incorrect if you'd been paying attention to the graphic novels.
Be smart: That said, even if Alexander can receive Whetstone's records — and even if they show she communicated with the reporters about him (yes, a big "if") — he would still have to prove that her comments were factually untrue.
The Real Source Of Inspiration On one hand, Denaver wanted to create looks that tell the story as factually as possible: "A lot of the research came from Tonya's videos, stills, and anything else we could find," she explains.
Courts in Canada, including my own, have come to view a lot of these as imposing cruel or unusual punishments, which create the risk of pressuring charged persons into pleading guilty when they might be legally or factually innocent.
How can such dangerous matters be bumped beneath the fold of the front page, or to b- and c-block discussions on TV, by comparably minor developments like Hillary Clinton's factually accurate observation that many Trump supporters are deplorable?
I recognize that we have a responsibility to be as factually accurate as possible in the content we create—I intend to do a better job of incorporating more historical background and cultural context on the dishes we feature.
This pairing is a hot mess and just factually inaccurate, but since I am a journalist I will take you down the rabbit hole, into the dark web of Bieber fan accounts, which is where the truth always lies.
Budget votes have traditionally been seen as votes of confidence, but asked whether that was the case, May's spokesman said: "The answer to that factually is no" and cited legislation which sets out the conditions for calling an election.
Rosenstein denied the allegations, calling them "inaccurate and factually incorrect," while reporters from the Washington Post allege, based on reporting from other sources who were in the room, that Rosenstein was being sarcastic when he made the reported statements.
All this is catnip to the president's apologists, who can now point to a genuine instance of fake news — not merely factually mistaken, but willfully misleading — in order to dismiss the great bulk of negative reportage that isn't fake.
" Earlier this year, when I reported on dozens of absolutely unreadable and factually disastrous celebrity biographies available on Amazon, First Amendment lawyer Patrick Kabat told me, "Amazon has no reason to be kicking lots and lots of people off.
He painted a reasonably coherent (if factually challenged) picture of Clinton as a corrupt liar who is beholden to the big-money interests rigging the American economy against its workers, and presented himself as a champion for all Americans.
But I believe that what may seem like inconsistencies are better explained as Justice Kennedy's effort to preserve and promote the fundamental values of American society amid the messy, factually diverse, context-specific world in which we actually live.
His comment in 2014 that ISIS was a "JV" team will haunt his legacy, and his frequent comment that ISIS is not an "existential threat to us" -- though perhaps factually correct -- plays into critiques that he has minimized the group's reach.
Glancing at the net numbers of jobs worldwide as if they were on a balance sheet and proclaiming the robots aren't killing any isn't just factually wrong, but, coming from an institution like the World Bank, could lead to disastrous policy.
But because of prying eyes, a lot of disabled people coming to public kink spaces have this sense of pressure—which factually doesn't often exist in the community—to fit the mold of what society has shown us BDSM should be.
The late night host went on to examine the president's latest bizarre 9/11 tweet — which he dubbed "the most factually accurate thing Trump has tweeted in about three months" — and then looked at some of his past screw ups.
" Arlington County Board Chairman Christian Dorsey, a supporter of the Amazon deal, told CNBC in the same interview Friday, "The very notion that saying 'no' to Amazon makes it better for potentially employee-owned businesses to thrive is factually incorrect.
Despite the fact that much of the show is factually wrong and somewhat diminishes the severity of Kaczynski's actions by hinting that he was mentally ill, its simple explanation of his politics became a kind of gateway for some eco-fascists.
"The allegations in the complaint are factually unsupported and without legal merit, and my counsel has submitted a response to the F.E.C." This, as others have pointed out, is not quite an admission that the money came from Cohen personally.
Last year, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researcher Zeynep Tufekci dubbed YouTube "the Great Radicalizer": view one anti-vaccination video, and YouTube will suggest a second; watch one factually incorrect political video, and YouTube will recommend a sequel.
"The choice is hers, but she ought to fully and deeply appreciate that injudicious comments undermine her office and her cases -- legally and factually -- and will call into question, in the public eye, the credibility of her work," he wrote.
Factually, our bill requires pre-existing illnesses to be covered in the block grant," Graham said in part, adding that the bill would allow "50 states to come up with solutions to help sick people, not just some bureaucrat in Washington.
Days ahead of the roll-out, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg faced critical questions from lawmakers when he defended Facebook's cryptocurrency plan, Libra, along with a host of other issues, including the platform's decision not to remove factually incorrect political advertisements.
President Trump on Monday sharply intensified a Republican campaign to frame the midterm elections as a battle over immigration and race, issuing a dark and factually baseless warning that "unknown Middle Easterners" were marching toward the American border with Mexico.
"If they want to argue factually that Trump fired Comey because he thought he was a bad F.B.I. director and that is all it was, then that is not obstruction because he's exercising the presidential power properly," Mr. Buell said.
But contrary to claims by some of her apologists, the remark is not taken out of context, it is not contradicted by anything else she says in the speech, and it is not marred merely because it is factually mistaken.
His polarizing — and at times factually challenged — closing arguments about immigration, creeping socialism and the Supreme Court have nationalized the race, attracting saturation media coverage, the value of which dwarfs the amounts most campaigns or super PACs can spend on ads.
But before the 12 Washington, D.C., residents start their deliberations, they got a final pitch from assistant U.S. attorney Jonathan Kravis, who argued that Stone's attempts to mislead the House Intelligence Committee caused the panel to produce a factually incorrect report.
""It&aposs factually inaccurate that we&aposre far left," he said, adding, "We rarely comment on politics unless we feel it rises to the level of some national or concern that is really important, and this would be a case.
While Gary Johnson is a very decent person, he often says things so weird and bizarre, and so factually false or uninformed, that far too often when he speaks he reveals that he just doesn't know what he is talking about.
This week, a new Deadspin report and video drove that point home, highlighting how the company demands that its local news anchors repeat factually-challenged, pro-Trump missives in relatively creepy nationwide unison: Opposition to Sinclair's blockbuster deal is bipartisan.
I have a son who literally is, I call him Wikipedia, Walking Wikipedia, because he has so many, well, not those facts, but he's so factually oriented that he will not talk about anything else, so it's an interesting change.
While a certain proportion of stories come from genuine sources via reputable journalists, a far higher proportion are factually baseless and are disseminated by websites with lax editorial policies, often in the form of rehashed articles and indiscriminate gossip round-ups.
People like the father of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee, and everyone's favorite Apple founder, Steve Wozniak explained that the FCC's reasoning for a repeal of net neutrality is based on a flawed and factually inaccurate understanding of Internet technology.
While it is factually correct to argue that "language is just a tool" to equip your chatbot with AI, using Python and its wider variety of libraries and off-the-shelf algorithms means it is a much more straightforward option than other languages.
So Blankenship hit back, with attacks that ranged from reasonable (he said McConnell is part of the "swamp") to racist (he attacked McConnell's in-laws by dubbing them "his China family") to ridiculous (he called McConnell "Cocaine Mitch" for factually suspect reasons).
" Saying that the special counsel's office is "empowered to deal with" that topic directly and noting that "[t]hey do have a bunch of Russians indicted," Giuliani said the special counsel's office has "a better argument for that [interview], legally and factually.
" After the Lee nomination, the former staffer continued, "Byrd went apoplectic, and Thompson was with him, so I doubt seriously that that language about the GS-15 came from Thompson's office, and I can tell you factually, it did not come from Byrd.
Brooks, echoing claims Trump made during his factually challenged Oval Office speech on Tuesday night, argued that a wall along the southern border is needed to prevent drugs from entering the country, as well as to prevent crime committed by undocumented immigrants.
Fortune writes that in order to complete a factually accurate equation like this, you would need to survey a large group of people and measure the contributing factors every single day of the year, which Arnall does not appear to have done.
Rather than treating the festival as an experience to be factually documented, Lyndon focuses on unexpected juxtapositions—between architectural shapes, interesting textures, and all sorts of tiny details—often pulling them out of their mundane contexts to create particular moments of poignancy.
In this debate, perhaps more than any other, the question of whether to fact-check the candidates emerged as a primary concern, considering Trump's predilection for factually inaccurate assertions and how little pushback he has faced on the veracity of his statements.
We spread the word by selecting popular faked scenes and consulting with the relevant experts on the subjects to explain why the scenes are unlikely or impossible, and compile an article to factually explain so with every effort to avoid getting personal.
By Alexander Winning and Andrew Osborn MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia launched a second day of air strikes against Syrian militants from an Iranian air base, rejecting U.S. suggestions its co-operation with Tehran might violate a U.N. resolution as illogical and factually incorrect.
Night and weekend bloggers were responsible for covering breaking news events and not just doing so in a way that wasn't factually wrong, defamatory, or phrased in a way that would turn the internet's ire against you, but doing so elegantly and cleverly.
A spokesperson for Rosenstein dismissed McCabe's characterization as "inaccurate and factually incorrect: "[B]ased on his personal dealings with the president, there is no basis to invoke the 25th Amendment, nor was the DAG in a position to consider invoking the 25th Amendment.
" Mr. Simmons has steadfastly denied the multiple accusations against him, and in a statement to The New York Times on Tuesday in response to Ms. Jones's account, he said: "I have respectfully, factually and comprehensively denied the charges of sexual violence against me.
In a speech responding to the shooting Monday, Trump made the following case that was bigoted, factually challenged, and previously beyond the pale for American politics at the presidential level — but also clear, easily digestible, and potentially emotionally appealing to many Americans.
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia on Tuesday accused a former U.S. Marine it has held for almost a year on spying charges of faking health problems in custody and lying about his ill-treatment, comments the U.S. embassy rejected as factually inaccurate "pulp fiction".
The President is heaping pressure on Republicans to buy a factually dubious but bold message: Not only did he not abuse power in Ukraine but his conduct is that of a tough guy President beset by corrupt elites and boosting the US abroad.
People don't want to read a book that's completely divorced from what happened since the campaign, but there's certain judgments that have to be made along the way about how to connect things thematically or factually to what's happened since the election.
"Copy editors, in the view of practitioners, are the people who keep written or spoken news (106.343) factually correct, (2) understandable, (3) to the point, (4) and grammatically fluent, when possible," Betsy Wade, a former chief of the foreign copy desk, said.
Few papers in the run-up to the Brexit referendum weaponized the tabloid tools of rumor, innuendo and invective like The Mail, whose lurid, factually murky warnings of immigrant violence and European Union evils helped tip the Leave campaign over the finish line.
Instead of taking Bill Cosby's "pound cake speech" approach, viewed as a factually-flawed and stodgy slander of Black American youth, Jones seems to adhere to the same school of thought as artists like Erykah Badu, who has forged close, empathetic bonds with younger musicians.
And while many of the videos may comply with YouTube's community guidelines (they don't contain nudity, threats of violence, spam, or copyright infringement), they offer YouTube's more than 1 billion monthly active users easy access to a vast array of factually incorrect and extremist content.
Facebook, for example, has rolled out a number of anti-disinformation initiatives since 2016, including barring sites that repeatedly publish false news articles from generating ad revenue, and collaborating with third-party fact-checkers to identify factually problematic stories and downrank them in the newsfeed.
The common discourse on immigration and terrorism focuses its attention away from these true causes, and therefore the true solutions, and instead focuses on factors which are factually incorrect and motivated more by racial bias than by an adherence to the reality of the situation.
Rosenstein issued a statement denying the Times report last week, calling it "factually incorrect" and stating that he does not believe there is any basis to invoke the 25th Amendment, which allows a president's Cabinet to declare them unfit for office by a majority vote.
I absolutely fell into this solve like a bumbling fool after figuring out the letters that correctly filled out the across half of these entries, which happened at 87A, "2002 Olympics locale," which is factually __ LAKE CITY, and that single __ has to represent SALT.
Aside from using at least three unedited rally hours this week to level factually inaccurate claims against his enemies, the president also submitted an op-ed attacking the Democrats' "Medicare for All" proposals in USA Today that was eventually deemed misleading by the news outlet.
The FDA claims to be a factually honest and completely statistic-driven organization, and while I don't doubt their good intentions, it is import to ensure that the presented facts remain applicable to the conversation, and that these facts are not outdated and irrelevant.
Sounds like the partnership might have been in play for "Zero Dark Thirty" ... Slotkin says she really appreciated the film as a CIA and Pentagon alum because it at least attempted to be factually accurate -- unlike many movies which are not rooted in reality.
The film may not be factually accurate, but for me it has the very essence of what hacking really is, camaraderie, wars, music, emotion and staying awake until 5am breaking into systems, with some well placed references to Orwell 1984, indeed it's a typo.
From the "Muslim ban" barring visitors from seemingly arbitrarily selected Muslim countries to his repeated, hostile, and often factually incorrect comments about Islam (like the debunked idea that American Muslims were "celebrating" 9/11), Trump has positioned himself in opposition to the American Muslim community.
"Even though the story is set in contemporary society, not post-slavery, it relies on us being factually correct in telling the story of how we got to a contemporary society where you've got a sovereign country that is run by Black Americans," Packer told Deadline.
The conspiracy theory around murdered Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich isn't weird so much as sad: it drags a man's fairly recent death into the spotlight in order to promote the idea of a "deep state" plot, based on evidence that's either speculative or factually wrong.
"We normally do not comment on speculation, but when a news outlet is advised that their reporting is factually incorrect and report it anyway, we feel compelled to set the record straight," Stankey, who heads the newly created unit of AT&T, said in a statement.
By way of example, here is a selection from an article that AI Writer wrote about the diet pill, Phentermine: In the context of the whole article about Phentermine, this paragraph feels like a bit of a non-sequitur, albeit a grammatically and factually correct one.
After McEnroe's comments began circulating, Williams tweeted a plea for him to not mention her name in any future discussions he might have about tennis rankings: Dear John, I adore and respect you but please please keep me out of your statements that are not factually based.
The moon in Pisces lights up the sector of your chart that rules cash and self-worth—you know your time and energy is precious, and though you might feel like you'll never run out of either time or energy, you factually know that isn't true.
"Atlas Air Worldwide CEO Bill Flynn told Business Insider in a statement that the case was not steeped in any individual case but rather was centered on "the significant spike in fatigue calls," of which he said many "were factually questionable — and supported by comparative data.
In my new column, I raised the prospect of Trump becoming a post-truth president in a fake news world, and suggested that Trump's factually false statements denying Russia's attacks against our democracy are the equivalent of Trump moving beyond fake news to inventing fake intelligence.
About the best he can do is plead ignorance of the law (generally ineffective with the sort of allegations being made) and to try to shift the blame to his accountants and attorneys (which will be factually difficult given Trump's personal involvement in many of the actions.
Additionally, the signatories assert the FCC's proposed order "is based on a flawed and factually inaccurate understanding of Internet technology," and refer back to a 43-page dossier submitted by a group of some 200 internet pioneers in July, which, among other things explains these inaccuracies.
I am a big fan of Heritage Foundation as a whole and agree with their analysis a vast majority of the time, but a recent Contributors piece by Bryan Riley extolling the virtues of trade was wrong factually in creating anecdotal evidence to support his theory.
Under the proposed rule, part of a creeping crackdown on digital rights under President Vladimir V. Putin, websites with more than 100,000 daily visitors and a commenting feature must take down factually inaccurate posts or face a fine of up to 50 million rubles, about $800,000.
For someone who by nature runs emotionally cool, given to detailed, clinical answers when challenged, Mr. Buttigieg came to embrace that a mayor's primary job was not to always have the factually correct answer — as in the lead paint case — but to empathize and provide inspiration.
Because what it says is, even if you find that an individual is innocent, even if you factually find out he's guilty of no terrorism, he didn't fight against us, he's not a prisoner of war, he's guilty of nothing, he must stay in jail forever.
Last month, Musk's legal team filed to have Unsworth's suit dismissed on the grounds that the Tesla chief executive did not initially mean for "pedo guy" to be taken factually and that he was simply asking questions when he hired a private investigator to look into Unsworth.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday disputed reporting about the extraction, first revealed by CNN and later covered by The New York Times and The Washington Post, calling it "materially inaccurate" and "factually wrong" without offering any specific comments about was incorrect in his view.
The findings also showed Americans diverging on what constitutes "fake news," with 65 percent saying it applies broadly to the editorial decisions outlets make over what topics to cover and 53 percent more narrowly defining it to apply only to the spread of factually incorrect information.
Either from the right —Trump took a swipe at her again this week by tweeting a (factually inaccurate) meme manufactured by the Daily Wire that looked like a campaign seal with the tagline "Warren: 1/2020th" — or, as the Iowa campaign stop shows, from her own supporters.
Photo: Thibault Camus (AP)Following reports that Facebook was involved with what amounted to a factually distorted smear campaign against philanthropist and Holocaust survivor George Soros, BuzzFeed News has obtained one of the documents used by the opposition research firm Definers Public Affairs to disseminate that narrative to reporters.
Surprising news arrives mid-week as messenger Mercury meets with Uranus, the planet of surprises, on Wednesday at 10:22 AM. Cross-reference your sources and make sure the messages you receive are actually, factually true—you should know by now that fast news doesn't mean real news!
White House chief economic adviser Kevin Hassett, during a presentation on the overall health of the economy, pushed back Monday on comments made by former President Obama last week, saying its "factually incorrect" to assert that current economic gains are a continuation of trends from the previous administration.
The judge, Edward R. Korman of United States District Court, shaved 10 years off Mr. Scarpa's sentence in a decision that castigated both the F.B.I. and the United States attorney's office in Brooklyn for its "implausible, contradictory, and factually unsupported reasons" for opposing a lighter sentence for Mr. Scarpa.
He would simply say things -- Muslims were celebrating on the roofs in northern New Jersey after 9/11, Ted Cruz's father might have been involved in JFK's assassination (or maybe he wasn't!), all the polls showed him beating Hillary Clinton -- that weren't factually true but seemed right to him.
If historically-timid Democrats take their dedication to the rule of law and the Constitution seriously, they'll realize that much of Trump's political base is impervious to arguments – no matter how logical or factually sound – made outside of the truth-starved, conspiracy theory-peddling right wing media bubble.
Trump could have boasted factually about his role in keeping Mac Pro production in the US. Apple announced in September that it would manufacture the new version of the computer in Austin; the Wall Street Journal had reported months earlier that the company would move the work to China.
"Marguerite & Julien" transposes the factually based, centuries-old tale of incestuous French lovers to a not-quite-modern setting (much nostalgia is expended depicting one of its characters developing photographs in a darkroom) that could be called "Wes Anderson and Sofia Coppola Land," only it isn't as attractive as that sounds.
More to the point, it would be nearly impossible to legally prove that Trump obstructed justice, since proving such a charge would require the prosecutor to establish intent, and it would be paradoxical to argue that the president intentionally obstructed justice when he was factually innocent of the underlying charge.
But to compare Tony Kornheiser and a political journalist discussing politics to Curt Schilling posting an image macro that is factually inaccurate to the point of incoherence (not to mention offensive) is a false equivalency not dissimilar to the ones featured in the various memes Curt Schilling is fond of posting.
During a subsequent legal investigation, Cline allegedly lied about his medical practices in a letter to the office; the falsehood became obvious when "the result from the DNA analysis test factually state that Dr. Donald Cline is the biological father of Kristy Killion and Jacoba Ballard," the court documents state.
This was a weird and factually incorrect thing to say, and it escalated the next day, when Florida congresswoman Frederica Wilson accused Trump of saying Sergeant La David Johnson "knew what he was signing up for" while talking to the Green Beret's pregnant widow during a call she listened in on.
Then an adjunct professor at the University of the Republic, Briozzo led the group, called "Iniciativas Sanitarias," in a pilot program at Pereira Rossell with one aim: to provide women contemplating an abortion with judgment-free, factually accurate information on, among other things, the use of medicines to terminate a pregnancy.
The reason Spicer should leave as White House press secretary is that, for many months, he has obviously faced internal pressure to toe the Trump line, and has made a succession of statements that were factually incorrect to the extent that he lacks credibility with the press and the nation.
For the second time in a week, Elon Musk appears to have tweeted factually incorrect information about his efforts to take Tesla Motors private: The bottom line: Neither Silver Lake nor Goldman Sachs have signed financial advisory agreements with Musk, or at least hadn't at the time of his tweet.
"For the President to say the E.U. was 'set up to take advantage of the United States, to attack our piggy bank,' or that 'NATO is as bad as NAFTA' is not only factually wrong, but proves to me that it's time to go," Mr. Melville wrote in a Facebook post.
Gusto's reasoning, according to its cease-and-desist letter sent to Rippling which it shared with Business Insider, is that Rippling's comparative ad is, in fact, factually inaccurate in its implication that a company can outgrow Gusto's software and services, despite the fact that Gusto itself outgrew its own systems.
"The first answer to both questions was supposed to be "I'm not here to discuss the candidates or the election..." The talking points then explain that "you should pivot from campaign to priorities," though it does specify that employees can "set the record straight factually if one of the candidates says something inaccurate.
Rather than have to follow a boring set of facts rolling across the screen as the two candidates scream at each other, Trump-rested Development holds up Trump's denials during the debate next to his past comments saying the opposite, paring down the debate into one easily digestible (and factually correct) short.
How many times did Trump say or do something -- taking a shot at John McCain's time as a prisoner of war, calling his opponents "low energy" and "lyin'," making any number of a series of factually inaccurate comments, the "Access Hollywood" tape -- that caused people to predict the immediate end of his campaign?
"For the President to say the EU was 'set up to take advantage of the United States, to attack our piggy bank,' or that 'NATO is as bad as NAFTA' is not only factually wrong, but proves to me that it's time to go," he wrote in the post, according to Foreign Policy.
Only a few companies have responded to the allegations so far: A spokeswoman for Janssen called the lawsuit "legally and factually unfounded," and went on to say that the company "acted appropriately, responsibly, and in the best interests of patients regarding our opioid medications," in a statement to the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Trump's adoption of a factually-challenged style of campaigning would have been impossible without the power of conservative media that has been building for decades and is now fused with the GOP presidential ticket through the role of Stephen Bannon, the head of Breitbart News, who serves as the CEO of the Trump campaign.
The same is true for trying to pass off glorified sawdust as the well-respected cheese known as Parmigiano Reggiano; not only is it bad manners, but it's factually inaccurate, a lack of respect to the artisans who have been making the real stuff the same way for centuries, and prohibited under EU regulations.
"The term 'fake news' has emerged as a catch-all phrase to refer to everything from news articles that are factually incorrect to opinion pieces, parodies and sarcasm, hoaxes, rumors, memes, online abuse, and factual misstatements by public figures that are reported in otherwise accurate news pieces," Facebook wrote in the white paper released Thursday.
Yes, on one hand people are talking a lot about "history," but when neo-Confederates talk about history, are they even talking about history as I know and teach and write it -- a series of events that happened in the past, which can be factually documented and examined through the objective consideration of sources?
"I don't know how she got it, but I do know that I received a comment call from Diana Falzone that was factually specific ... the day or two after 'Access Hollywood,' " Davidson added, referring to a tape of Trump making lewd comments about women that was released about a month before the 2016 election.
Read more: Trump claims he's never heard of a Category 5 hurricane — but 4 storms of that intensity have threatened the US under his presidencyTrump's tweets included retweets of the National Weather Service and the National Hurricane Center as well as his own commentary on the developing storm — some of which was factually incorrect.
"It was important to us, as the season went on, to get more and more into Beck's point of view, so that you can factually compare and contrast the times that [Joe] is correct about why she's doing what she's doing, and then the times when he's way off the mark," Ms. Gamble explained.
The overarching goals of these reforms were to ensure IC agencies: (2202) worked in a more integrated way than they had in the lead up to both the 2628/28500 attacks and the Iraq WMD mistakes; and (6900) would present U.S. policy makers with factually-based assessments, untainted by either politics or policy preferences.
But US Magistrate Judge Jeremiah C. Lynch ruled that "Anglin's personal safety concerns are factually unsupported" to provide a blanket protective order that would allow him to be deposed outside the U.S. Lynch did say the court could resolve disputes about the deposition as they arose if Anglin did come to the United States.
Fears about the Chinese government have created a factually dubious panic around companies like Huawei, which has been widely banned from operating in the US. At least one American company, Facebook, has used these fears as ammunition against antitrust investigators — claiming that if regulators check Facebook's power, a pro-censorship Chinese alternative will take its place.
N.Y. Times headline published this afternoon: "Rosenstein Suggested Secretly Recording Trump and Discussed 25th Amendment..." (In a statement, Rosenstein called the story factually incorrect and said there are no grounds for using the 25th.) The bottom line: This presents on the fence Republicans with a nightmarish week ahead, while red state Democrats might have a chance to breathe easier.
This might have been the most frustrating moment of the whole hearing, since it was all at once factually incorrect, ignorant or dismissive of basic context, clearly designed to discredit a witness there in good faith (Mozilla COO Denelle Dixon), and spoken at the end of his allotted time so no response was possible from Dixon.
Because tone comes from the top, we've seen a similar approach taken by administration agencies, from the EPA's attempt to ban employees use of the phrase "climate change" to efforts to hide former EPA Secretary Scott Pruitt's meeting with industry lobbyists to the Interior Department's issuing a factually false report about the economic impact of national monuments.
Following Ambassador Bush's tense meeting in Rabat, the U.S. administration responded with a partial acknowledgment of factual error in its human rights report: The chronology of an alleged arrest for defamation of the country's national security chief was factually impossible because the arrest was supposed to have happened before the chief had even been appointed to the post.
Yes, many people are falling for fake or bogus or sensationalized news — and the Trump campaign expertly took a kernel of truth (that many mainstream media sources didn't want him to win) and spun it into the idea that no media story highlighting his flaws, lies or corruption (no matter how carefully and factually reported) could be believed.
"It seems a bit strange the president of the United States comes in and drafts this statement that is just factually wrong about the content and context of that meeting and this seems to be a pattern of constantly trying to take the public's attention away from anything that deals with Russia," Mr. Warner told CNN.
So, as one of the few top FBI officials with authority to share information with the media, McCabe said he asked other officials to speak with Barrett to "correct factually inaccurate things" and provide more context for issues that had already been reported publicly for months about the infighting between the Justice Department and FBI over the case.
But Zuckerberg and others at the company do not seem to understand that there is a tangible difference between reporting what is happening in the world with the intention of getting the facts right, which is what legitimate news organizations try to do every day, and saying whatever you want regardless of whether it's factually true or not.
But in order to make it sound true, Trump's tweets ended up twisting the facts in ways that range from factually dubious (the notion that allegations of Trump-Russia collusion are a "hoax") to the downright offensive (claiming the FBI would have caught the Parkland, Florida, shooter if it hadn't been so busy investigating his ties to Russia).
In his June 8 op-ed, "Public Broadcasting Can Survive, and Even Improve, Without Subsidies," Howard Husock advances a premise so untethered from reality and based on supporting arguments so factually flawed, one would think that they came from someone who had no knowledge whatsoever of public television, public radio, and the roles of the Department of Education and the Federal Communications Commission.
Future research should evaluate selective exposure to other forms of hyper-politicized media including hyperpartisan Twitter feeds and Facebook groups, internet forums such as Reddit, more established but often factually questionable websites like Breitbart, and more traditional media like talk radio and cable news Ya, that would probably be helpful to understanding the scope of the fake news problem in America.
According to the indictment of Judge Joseph, her offense was this: after dismissing the charge against the defendant as factually insufficient, she briefly stopped recording the proceedings and allowed him to go to the holding cell to confer with his lawyer; a court officer let him out the back door, rather than the front, as the ICE agent had anticipated.
She is living proof that President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE couldn't be more wrong — both morally and factually — when he demonizes those who come to America seeking a better life.
During his rambling presentation, and in questions with reporters, Trump made many factually incorrect claims about immigrants, immigration policy and crime — including claims that asylum seekers never show up in court (two-thirds do), that Barack Obama had a harsher family separation policy than him (Trump's was much harsher) and that he's getting billions for his wall (he's gotten none).
"As I look at him, I know factually from talking to him that some of my biggest issues — like criminal justice reform, like racial justice, like economic justice — that he is going to be a strong leader on that and can actually pull the country together, the kinds of coalitions we need, to actually make progress in those areas," Booker said.
They point to Biden's weak performance in the first debate, when he came under fire from Harris; to his penchant for verbal gaffes, which has recently included reports that he delivered factually incorrect versions of a story about a meeting with a member of the military in Afghanistan; and to his comfort within a political establishment from which many voters appear alienated.
The two SNL alums appeared in the show's cold open Saturday evening that also added Leslie Jones as Oprah Winfrey in a skit that captured some of the silliness of the current moment — a gossipy, factually questionable book taking down a figure who was often cast as a Republican kingmaker, and a debate about whether Oprah should run for president.
Appelbaum did not reply to a request for an interview, but instead forwarded our request to a publicist who told Gizmodo, "Jake's legal team is working on an injunction against these monstrous and factually incorrect accusations—you might have noticed that not a single verifiable fact is mentioned, which makes it difficult to counter any of these insinuations on a case-by-case basis."
Pollak himself, for instance, has repeatedly dismissed the factually true observation that Trump defended white supremacists after the violent Charlottesville rallies — comments that were recorded on video — as a "hoax," arguing that when Trump said there were "very fine people" on both sides of the rallies, he was referring merely to people who opposed the removal of Confederate monuments (the rallies were organized by avowed white nationalists).
Junk news in this context refers to content produced by known sources of political misinformation — aka outlets that are systematically producing and spreading "ideologically extreme, misleading, and factually incorrect information" — with the researchers comparing interactions with junk stories from such outlets to news stories produced by the most popular professional news sources to get a snapshot of public engagement with sources of misinformation ahead of the EU vote.
"Because of recent statutory amendments establishing that life begins at fertilization, the alleged victim in this case should be considered by this court as nine months older than her date of birth," Overstreet's motion read, according to the AP. "Because of this, at the time of the alleged incident, the alleged victim would have been 16 years old and thus a charge of aggravated indecent liberties is factually impossible," he argued.
It was a showcase of the Trump campaign's most diverse surrogates: Lyyne Patton, the black vice president of the Eric Trump Foundation; Katrina Pierson, a spokesperson known for her willingness to say strange and factually inaccurate things; Omarosa, the Apprentice contestant who is now Trump's director of African-American outreach; and the YouTube duo Diamond and Silk, a pair of black sisters who have travelled the country giving pro-Trump speeches.
Having cycled through her many identities — little baby Evelyn with the misspelled name, and Fannie and Shirlene and A. C. — she would spend a far longer span of time with the label scrawled on the ledger of the potter's field beside grave No. 537, one both factually lacking and yet wholly accurate in describing who she was, how she came to be in that grave and who put her there. Unknown.
District Judge Paul Engelmayer for the Southern District Court of New York wrote in his 147-page opinion Wednesday that while the Conscience Provision seeks to "recognize and protect undeniably important rights," the rule in its current form is "contrary to law," was implemented "arbitrarily and capriciously" by HHS, was based on claims that were "factually untrue," conflicts with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and is unconstitutional.
On the heels of the Senate's failure to pass a disaster relief bill on Monday, President Donald Trump posted a string of factually inaccurate tweets defending his position that federal government aid to the hurricane-ravaged island of Puerto Rico should be limited to food stamp subsidies, and made clear he prioritizes the needs of US citizens living in flood-ravaged Midwestern states above those of US citizens living in Puerto Rico.
A former lawyer for Stormy Daniels said Monday that a Fox News reporter obtained "factually specific" information about an alleged affair between the adult-film star and President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE before the 22019 presidential election.
As a direct result of the exposé, networks and producers leapt forward at the chance to tell the story both fictionalized and factually: The first include an episode on A&E's "A&E Investigates Cults and Extreme Belief" series, which has an entire episode dedicated to NXIVM, as well as a 2017 documentary titled NXIVM: Multi-Level Marketing, which actually features interviews with Raniere, Salzman, and other prominent current and former members.
And in 2015, documents obtained by the Guardian indicated that the company was lobbying US lawmakers and officials to establish contracts to detain migrant families in the US. While the Gates Foundation's assertion that several million is a blip compared to all of the money the charity has funneled into less morally bankrupt causes is factually correct, it's an egregiously weak argument for having any stake in an institution most credible for locking people up and abusing them.
It's basically the dynamic depicted in David Fincher's "The Social Network," which was somewhat factually iffy in its portrait of Facebook's founding but totally true to the culture in which the social-media giant was incubated — a culture in which echt-preppies like the Winklevii, Mark Zuckerberg's rivals, exist so other slightly-less-privileged kids can hate them, and work twice as hard to beat them, and then tell themselves that they were underdogs all along.
Finally, tell us more about what you think: About the caravan as a political issue This article explains how the president is using the issue of the caravan to stir up fears about foreigners and crime ahead of the midterm elections: President Trump on Monday sharply intensified a Republican campaign to frame the midterm elections as a battle over immigration and race, issuing a dark and factually baseless warning that "unknown Middle Easterners" were marching toward the American border with Mexico.
He inspired a belief that citizens can be involved and make a difference; that giving back to the country is not abstract, but personal; that public service is more than just clinging to a seat in Congress or a job in an administration; that we can approach the future by more objectively and factually anticipating the positive and negative ways in which it is likely to affect us -- in the process, figuring out how to master change and not end up victims of it.

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