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Reason: None provided.

I'm wondering if you're bothering to read through any of these links, because you're linking things like police reports that specifically say there is no credible evidence for these reports.

It looks like much of this is just people saying that it has happened.

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/misinformation/jd-vance-ohio-police-no-reports-haitian-immigrants-harming-pets-rcna170271

Police in Springfield, Ohio, said Monday they had received no credible reports of immigrants harming pets, contradicting a claim by Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance.

The police report that started all of this in the first place turner out to be false. The cat that the woman said was eaten by Haitian neighbors was found to be just fine, in her own basement.

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-supporter-blamed-haitians-stealing-cat-finds-pet-1956041

Anna Kilgore gained national attention after filing a police report in which she accused her Haitian neighbors of being responsible for her cat's disappearance in late August, claiming they had eaten the cat. However, it was later discovered that her cat, Miss Sassy, had been hiding in Kilgore's basement the entire time. After realizing her mistake, Kilgore used a translation app to apologize to her neighbors, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Things like this really damages the credibility of people that are going in hard on it. Especially if they're not even reading the stuff that they're sharing, which is negating what they're claiming.

Edited to add: The fact that all of these claims that Haitians/immigrants are eating people's pets only came after Vance shared that report from Anna Kilgore which turned out to be untrue should make people at least hesitate over believing them without some solid evidence. (Solid evidence isn't just people saying it.)

If this was such a huge issue, why are people only reporting it now?

3 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I'm wondering if you're bothering to read through any of these links, because you're linking things like police reports that specifically say there is no credible evidence for these reports.

It looks like much of this is just people saying that it has happened.

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/misinformation/jd-vance-ohio-police-no-reports-haitian-immigrants-harming-pets-rcna170271

Police in Springfield, Ohio, said Monday they had received no credible reports of immigrants harming pets, contradicting a claim by Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance.

The police report that started all of this in the first place turner out to be false. The cat that the woman said was eaten by Haitian neighbors was found to be just fine, in her own basement.

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-supporter-blamed-haitians-stealing-cat-finds-pet-1956041

Anna Kilgore gained national attention after filing a police report in which she accused her Haitian neighbors of being responsible for her cat's disappearance in late August, claiming they had eaten the cat. However, it was later discovered that her cat, Miss Sassy, had been hiding in Kilgore's basement the entire time. After realizing her mistake, Kilgore used a translation app to apologize to her neighbors, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Things like this really damages the credibility of people that are going in hard on it. Especially if they're not even reading the stuff that they're sharing, which is negating what they're claiming.

Edited to add: The fact that all of these claims that Haitians/immigrants are eating people's pets only came after Vance shared that report from Anna Kilgore *which turned out to be untrue * should make people at least hesitate over believing them without some solid evidence. (Solid evidence isn't just people saying it.)

If this was such a huge issue, why are people only reporting it now?

3 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I'm wondering if you're bothering to read through any of these links, because you're linking things like police reports that specifically say there is no credible evidence for these reports.

It looks like much of this is just people saying that it has happened.

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/misinformation/jd-vance-ohio-police-no-reports-haitian-immigrants-harming-pets-rcna170271

Police in Springfield, Ohio, said Monday they had received no credible reports of immigrants harming pets, contradicting a claim by Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance.

The police report that started all of this in the first place turner out to be false. The cat that the woman said was eaten by Haitian neighbors was found to be just fine, in her own basement.

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-supporter-blamed-haitians-stealing-cat-finds-pet-1956041

Anna Kilgore gained national attention after filing a police report in which she accused her Haitian neighbors of being responsible for her cat's disappearance in late August, claiming they had eaten the cat. However, it was later discovered that her cat, Miss Sassy, had been hiding in Kilgore's basement the entire time. After realizing her mistake, Kilgore used a translation app to apologize to her neighbors, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Things like this really damages the credibility of people that are going in hard on it. Especially if they're not even reading the stuff that they're sharing, which is negating what they're claiming.

3 days ago
1 score