Sunday, September 09, 2007

What Is And Isn't...

The latest from Snopes.

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E-mail reproduces various "Marxist" statements made by Senator Hillary Clinton.
Does the artificial butter flavoring used in microwave
popcorn pose a danger of lung damage to ordinary consumers?
E-mail claims the owner of a
Dunkin' Donuts franchise refused service to U.S. servicemen.
E-mail describes case of six black students in
Jena, Louisiana, who were charged with attempted murder for a beating administered to a white student.
Cuteness alert: Photographs show a puppy born with a
heart-shaped pattern in its coat.
Update: California traffic accident
mirrors grisly urban legend.
'Ghostly' rescue in a
pushed car.
1998 and 1999 warnings about
rattlesnakes and heroin-filled syringes offing little kids who play in ball pits at fast food restaurants have returned. Still false.
While it's true a consortium of wireless providers is planning to create a 411 (directory assistance) service for cell phone numbers, you need not
register your cell phone with the national "Do Not Call" directory to prevent your number from being provided to telemarketers.
A look at two
eraser sponge rumors, that they contain formaldehyde or have caused chemical burns when rubbed on skin.
Dialing
#77 or *677 is not a surefire way of reaching the local highway patrol — the service is in place in some regions, but not in others. If in need of assistance, dial 911 instead for the sure thing.
There was no letter to
Starbucks from coffee-seeking G.I.s serving in Iraq, so no response from the coffee retailer saying it didn't support the war and anyone in it. As for Oscar Mayer refusing troops free hot dogs, the 2004 Starbucks e-mail was altered in 2007 to aim it at the blameless hot dog maker.
No, the new
dollar coin doesn't omit "In God We Trust" - that phrase has been stamped into its edge.
Is Illinois Senator
Barack Obama "ideologically Muslim"?
The missing child alert about 13-year-old
Ashley Flores of Philadelphia is a hoax.
The entreaty to aid 7-year-old
Amy Bruce who is dying of lung cancer and a brain tumor by forwarding an email and a sappy poem titled "Slow Dance" is a hoax.
Is there a Wal-Mart
check theft ring?
The
Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act (which seeks to ensure that insurance companies cover a minimum of 48-hour hospital stays for those undergoing mastectomies) is before the House again (which it has been every odd year since 1999).
Images do show the
USS New York, which is being built with steel from the Twin Towers.
No,
Jay Leno did not write the "Hits the Nail on the Head" essay — it was Craig R. Smith.
Will pressing
#-9-0 on your telephone allow scammers to make long-distance calls and charge them to your phone bill?
3-year-old
Reachelle Marie Smith is missing from her Minot, North Dakota, home.
E-mailed petition advocates
denying social services to immigrants.
No, Johns Hopkins Hospital has not issued a "
cancer update" detailing how cancer spreads and recommending methods for treating the disease.
No,
reusing plastic bottles will not result in their breaking down into cancer-causing components.
Yes,
Bank of America has been offering credit cards to customers who lack Social Security cards.
No, robbers are not luring female victims into sniffing ether-laced
perfume in parking lots.
While it is true that in 2004 a man in India was electrocuted when trying to use his cell phone as it recharged, it is safe to use your cell phone while it is
charging.
No,
Bill Gates is not sharing his fortune with everyone who forwards a specific e-mail on his behalf. This tired leg-pull continues to romp through everyone's inbox, the most widespread incarnation swearing "This took two pages of the Tuesday USA Today!"
Seems like everyone has become the recipient of mysterious e-mails promising untold wealth if only one helps a wealthy foreigner quietly move millions of dollars out of his country. The venerable
Nigerian Scam has discovered the goldmine that is the Internet. Beware — there's still no such thing as "something for nothing," and the contents of your bank account will end up with these wily foreigners if you fall in with this.
Likewise, look out for mailings announcing you've won a foreign
lottery you don't recall entering.
Or that because you share the surname of a wealthy person who died without leaving a will you're in line for a windfall
inheritance.
And be especially wary if, while trying to sell or rent anything online (car, boat, horse, motorcycle, painting, apartment, you name it) you're approached by a prospective buyer/renter who wants to pay with a cashier check made out for an amount
in excess of the agreed-upon price and who asks the balance be sent to a third party.
Aspiring
work-at-homers promised big bucks for acting as intermediaries for international transactions wherein they cash checks for other parties or reship goods to them have been defrauded by con artists. Don't you be next.
If someone telephones to announce you can have a $200 Wal-Mart
shopping spree or $200 in gasoline coupons in return for a $3.49 processing charge to be debited directly from your bank account, hang up. You're being set up via the promise of "something for almost nothing" into authorizing a swindler to help himself to the contents of your bank account.
If someone calls to announce you've failed to appear for
jury duty and will be arrested, do not give the caller your personal and financial information in an effort to prove he's sending the gendarmes after the wrong guy. You're being tricked into giving up this information to an identity thief.

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