Fact ChecksInboxer Rebellion
Every day we're bombarded with e-mail of dubious origin and even more dubious veracity: messages that plead with us to find a missing kid or help a sick child, sign a petition to right some terrible injustice, take a stand on an important piece of pending legislation, forward a message to claim free merchandise, or take heed of the latest computer virus. The messages that aren't outright hoaxes are often full of misinformation, and even the ones that have some truth to them are usually out-of-date by the time we receive them. This is the place where the inboxer rebellion begins! The categories below should help you locate and identify whether that piece of e-mail you've received is a hoax, the truth, or something in between.
Food, Snack
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Irish Spring soap works as a fly repellent?
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A man named Ken Huber from Tawas City Michigan purportedly wrote what has America become in a letter to the editor.
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Fuzzy horse muzzle
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Michael J. Fox.
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