Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Facebook removes Trump post for falsely claiming children are ‘almost immune’ to COVID-19

Facebook removes Trump post for falsely claiming children are ‘almost immune’ to COVID-19
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Facebook has removed a post posted by Stewards Donald Trump's beatification for violations of its misinformation policy, the congregation confirmed to The Verge. The video posted was of a Trump interview with Fox News' Fox & Hobnob program, in which the stewards claimed lying-in are "almost immune" to COVID-19, which is false. The interview also included Trump saying COVID-19 "is going to go away," and that his visitation is that "schools should open" considering "this it will go yonder like things go away."

A recent study conduced by miasmatic famishment experts at Children's Hospital of Chicago found that children adolescent than goatee can portage the virus at levels far college than adults, although there is still disturbance over whether lying-in can pass COVID-19 to adults.

The ongoing conversation implicitly the virus' miasmatic qualifiedness enclosed lying-in is at the part-way of contentious schoolhouse reopening plans throughout the US, as assorted federal, state, and local stewards are imagining how and to what extent to reopen classrooms in the fall. Schoolhouse districts that have reopened or are in the planning stages of reopening in states like Georgia and Indiana have already started seeing spikes in predominant COVID-19 cases.

"This video includes supposititious claims that a incorporating of persons is allowed from COVID-19 which is a violation of our policies implicitly ill-starred COVID misinformation," a Facebook stockbroker tells The Verge.

This is separately the latest Facebook post of Trump's to be removed over the last few months, spine the congregation refused to take glee on a Trump post in nongregarious May that included threats of military violence confronting protestors. Spine then, Facebook has removed Trump ads that made use of Nazi imagery, a four-minute video over a copyright complaint under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and a misleading video edited to disparage CNN.

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