What's actually being claimed in this election cycle
We tracked 480 viral claims this quarter. Three patterns explain most of them.
We tracked 480 viral claims this quarter. Three patterns explain most of them.

European wire services frame the 90-day verification window as the *centerpiece* of the deal; U.S.…

The 3-month running mean is high but not a record. The 1997 and 2015 events both peaked higher on the same Niño 3.…

Recent peer-reviewed nutrition reviews don't find the causal link the claim asserts at typical intake levels. The narrower oxidation-product question is real but distinct.
The 3:1 ratio is on *new* prescriptions in commercial insurance — Medicare, Medicaid, and the cash-pay segment all skew the other direction.

The chart making the rounds is W-2 hires only. Stitching contract roles back in (BLS contractor data + Upwork) re-traces the post-2023 line with a positive slope.

The pilot's authors explicitly warned against generalising the result. Larger follow-ups are running but haven't published; the headline figure is still that 2022 pilot.
Because you explored the Affordable Care Act collapse-warning story closely in 2017 and asked us to follow up.
The 2017 “Obamacare premiums will spike 25%” warning is back — and it missed reality by 8x.
Because you bookmarked the 2019 round-two tariff coverage and we said we'd circle back.
“Round-two China tariffs will cost U.S. manufacturing 380,000 jobs by year-end.”
Because you read three explainers on the December El Niño forecast and saved the NOAA brief.
“This El Niño will be a record-breaker — bigger than 1997 and 2015.”
Because you followed the 2023 yield-curve-recession debate closely.
“A 75% chance of recession by Q4 — the inverted yield curve doesn't lie.”
Because you've followed five stories on EV-credit policy this year.
“EV demand will fall 40% once the federal credit phases out.”
Because you saved three takes on the 2024 “AI-replaces-juniors” podcast cycle.
“AI will eliminate 60% of entry-level coding jobs by mid-2025.”

Because you've read 7 stories on drug-pricing reform this month.
Drug-pricing reform stalls in committee. Pharmacy middlemen keep their rebate margin.
Because you flagged Markets as a topic and saved two EV-credit stories.
EV tax-credit phaseout passes the House — domestic automakers get one carve-out.
Because you live in NY and itemize. We surface SALT moments aggressively for filers like you.
Cap on state-tax deductions hits high-tax states the hardest.
Because you've watched two episodes on the Atlantic-port fee debate.
New Atlantic port tariffs add a fee at every container — domestic ports gain volume.
Because you saved the FTC data-broker brief and follow Privacy as a topic.
Federal data-broker rule passes. Three large firms keep their carve-out.
Because you've followed the income-driven-repayment debate for two years.
Income-driven loan plan revival — borrowers below 225% of poverty line gain.

by The Washington Post
Invites the reader to interrogate a claim in conversation. Surfaces the most interesting threads to pull on — contested evidence, hidden assumptions, comparative cases — and answers follow-up questions grounded in the rest of the agent panel's analyses.

by The Washington Post
Identifies potential conflicts of interest, undisclosed financial relationships, sponsored content, and advocacy that may be driven by the speaker's personal or institutional interests.

by The Washington Post
Traces claims back to their original source documents, reports, and primary materials. Identifies when speakers cite sources accurately, when they rely on secondhand reporting, and when no source is provided at all.

by The Washington Post
Translates a policy into a specific household calculation. Shows the user the dollar-and-cents math against a representative profile they can edit to make their own.

by The Washington Post
Verifies historical claims, dates, events, and attributions cited in media content. Cross-references primary historical sources to confirm accuracy and surface important context that speakers may omit or distort.

by The Washington Post
Independently verifies numerical claims by cross-referencing primary data sources, checking methodologies, and confirming whether cited statistics are accurate, current, and properly attributed.
Because you live in New York and itemize your taxes.
You'd take home about $2,480 less per year. The cap on state-tax deductions hits New York hardest.
Because you searched mid-tier EV pricing twice this month.
If the EV credit phases out next quarter, your next car gets pricier by about this much.
Because you flagged Education and have a federal direct loan in your profile.
Income-driven repayment revival saves you about this each month.
Because you've followed PBM rebate-pass-through stories for six months.
If PBM rebates pass through to patients, your insulin co-pay drops by about this much.
Because you live in a coastal county and we've watched the FEMA flood-map redraw.
Federal flood-map redraw raises your homeowner premium starting July.
Because your profile says two children under 17 and household income under $200K.
Restoring the expanded child tax credit puts this back in your pocket.
Because you have engaged with healthcare-policy claims this week — let us check what stuck.
Most people think killing the Obamacare penalty for going uninsured caused health insurance premiums to spike. Did it?
Because you saved three explainers on the December El Niño forecast.
Did this year's El Niño actually break the all-time temperature record set in 1997?
Because you've followed three takes on the 2024 “AI replaces juniors” podcast cycle.
Did AI eliminate more than half of entry-level coding jobs in 2025?
Because you bookmarked the 2019 round-two tariff coverage.
Did the 2019 tariff round actually cost U.S. manufacturing more than 300,000 jobs?
Because you've watched four nutrition-discourse podcasts in the last month.
In normal kitchen use, do seed oils drive higher rates of inflammation in healthy adults?
Because you saved the 2022 microplastics-in-blood explainer.
Are microplastics confirmed in the bloodstream of nearly every adult tested?
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