The WHO has been spreading dangerous misinformation. Instead of owning up to their constant, deadly mistakes, they have foolishly deputized a mediocre woke popstar in order to regain credibility. It won’t work.
The headline was a first in Jewish history: “Senior Orthodox rabbis allow Zoom for Passover seder due to Coronavirus.”
On March 3, the virus had already gone global and impacted tens of thousands, but the WHO was more concerned with language policing.
It wasn't fans that crashed this industry; it was publishers that decided to ignore systemic issues and mock readers instead, capped off by the hand grenade of the coronavirus.
Kathy Griffin was called a fraud for going to the ER with coronavirus symptoms, yet not having the illness. But for high-risk individuals, the decision to seek care at this time is a difficult one.
Following Trump's outing this evening at the White House daily briefing on coronavirus, #BoycottTrumpPressConferences began to trend, quickly reaching 40,000 tweets at the time of writing.
Pelosi critiqued Trump for his failure to imagine the disastrous effect of the COVID-19 coronavirus on America, when in fact she failed to imagine the same thing.
Twitter's attempt to staunch the flow of misinformation surrounding the coronavirus is very nearly laughable. The attempts appear partisan at best, and nefarious at worst.
Citizens’ civil liberties in the US and Canada are being threatened by governmental overreach through surveillance.
Conspiracy theorists are undermining COVID-19 taskmaster Dr. Anthony Fauci with the runaway claim that he’s an agent of the so-called “Deep State”
Hillary Clinton thought it would be wise to use the increase in US coronavirus cases as an opportunity to dunk on President Trump. It wasn't.
Depictions of disease and the art that comes from disease can oftentimes inspire for generations.
The postponement of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics due to coronavirus prolongs the question of whether male athletes who self-ID as women will compete in women’s sports.
This boredom was resolved by Peter MacKay, who this week urged the Conservative Party to speed up the leadership contest.