Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Emma Gonzalez Didn't Actually Rip Up the Constitution, Despite What NRA Supporters Might Think

Emma Gonzalez Didn't Actually Rip Up the Constitution, Despite What NRA Supporters Might Think
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

The March For Our Lives took place on March 24 in cities all across the nation. In countless cities and towns, protestors took to the streets, urging lawmakers to enact stricter gun control laws and bring an end to school shootings. The primary march took place in Washington D.C. and was organized by survivors of the Parkland, Florida, shooting, which took the lives of 17 innocent people at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas high school on Valentines Day. One such survivor, Emma Gonzalez, co-founded the #NeverAgain movement and gave an impassioned speech at the event. Because of the attention she's receiving, many gun rights advocates have begun spreading doctored images of her supposedly tearing apart the constitution.


The hoax was debunked in a tweet by Don Moynihan, a professor at the University of Wisconsin.

On the left, Gonzalez appears to be tearing apart a copy of the Constitution. This image was spread among many gun right advocates, but is actually a doctored version of the photo on the right, taken from a Teen Vogue video which was meant to accompany an op-ed written by Gonzalez.

Here's the original video for comparison:

Apparently, the false image of Gonzalez was one of the top results when Moynihan searched her name on Twitter.

It was originally tweeted by an accounted titled "Linda NRA Supporter" and was retweeted over 65 thousand times. It quickly became clear, however, that "Linda" was no more than a Russian bot hoping to further partisan divisions in the United States.

Moynihan suspected this might be the case.

And even if the 8 digits in "Linda's" handle weren't a dead give-away, Twitter confirmed Moynihan's suspicions shortly thereafter.

Other news outlets had the same idea as the Russians, however:

Gab, a publication described by The Washington Post as "a popular refuge for the alt-right" also posted a doctored GIF of Gonzalez supposedly ripping up the constitution. They used the same video as their source and, before long, the edited image had received 1.8K retweets and over 3K favorites.

Hours later, long after most users were left to assume the image was real, Gab posted another tweet claiming the GIF was satirical. The clarifying tweet was retweeted a mere 147 times (as of the writing of this article).

Instead of making up lies about the victims of the Parkland shooting, perhaps we should listen to them.

H/T - Mashable, Teen Vogue

More from News

Millie Bobby Brown
Michael Buckner/Variety/Getty Images

Millie Bobby Brown Tells The Media To 'Get Off My F—king Case' After Cruel Scrutiny Over Her Looks

Stranger Things Millie Bobby Brown has called out the media—again—for their portrayal of her appearance in their headlines.

Brown's career was hard-launched when she was ten years old when she introduced the iconic "Eleven" character in the Stranger Things franchise, and the public has really struggled to accept the fact that she's a human being who will grow and change like the rest of us, meaning she can't stay ten years old forever.

Keep Reading Show less
Glenn Close
Edward Berthelot/WireImage

Glenn Close Offers Hilarious Reaction After 'All's Fair' Is Met With Abysmal Reviews From Critics

Well, Disney+ and Hulu's new Ryan Murphy series All's Fair hasn't exactly gone according to plan, garnering some of the worst reviews in the history of television.

And star Glenn Close had a perfect response to the critics.

Keep Reading Show less
Gavin Newsom
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Newsom Offers Scathing One-Word Response To 8 Democrats Who Caved And Voted With GOP To End Shutdown

California Governor Gavin Newsom criticized the eight Democratic Senators who voted with Republicans to end the government shutdown by advancing a spending deal that notably omits an extension of expanded Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies.

Under the current agreement, the enhanced subsidies would expire, though senators would have the option to revisit the issue later in the year. Supporters of the compromise say that deferring the vote was the only viable path forward, as many Republicans refused to discuss the subsidies until the government reopened.

Keep Reading Show less
artificial intelligence
Aidin Geranre on Unsplash

People Reveal How They Lost Their Jobs To Artificial Intelligence

The concept of artificial intelligence (AI) dates back thousands of years with ancient myths. Later, inventors would create automatons that moved independently through the use of gears, cogs, and springs.

But for a long time, the idea of an artificial brain was relegated to science fiction.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump; Barack Obama
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Alex Wong/Getty Images

Trump Slammed After Seemingly Believing Patently False Post From Satirical Website About Obama

President Donald Trump was called out after he shared an article headline about former President Barack Obama—without realizing it came from a satirical news site published nearly nine months earlier.

The post came from the Dunning-Kruger Times, a satirical website, claiming that Obama is making millions in "royalties" from Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies. The piece from the site makes the specific false claim that the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had stopped paying Obama $2.6 million a year in "royalties associated with Obamacare."

Keep Reading Show less