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  • 2021-08-23 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Tucker Carlson Say This About Nebraska Man's Death to Stoke COVID Vaccine Fears? (en)
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  • In late August 2021, several Snopes readers asked us to investigate a rumor that Fox News host Tucker Carlson failed to explain the actual circumstances of a Nebraska man's death in order to stoke fear about the COVID-19 vaccine's potential to kill. Beginning on Aug. 20, readers shared with us the below-transcribed message that they had seen on Facebook or in emails: A couple days prior, on Aug. 18, a Twitter user posted the same language. That user's tweets linked to an Aug. 20 Facebook post with the verbatim claim attributed to former Democratic U.S. Sen. Al Franken. Next, we turned to Franken's official YouTube channel, where we indeed found an Aug. 18 video in which he alleged this past Friday Carlson supposedly talked about the Nebraska man's death, omitting key context. In other words, Franken appeared to be the source of the claim. That origin story aside, the underlying claim was that Carlson, who has repeatedly tried to convince viewers to disavow masks during the pandemic, suggested on Aug. 13 (the Friday before the Franken video) that a man from Kearney, Nebraska, received a COVID-19 vaccine and died 12 hours later because of it. But, under the claim's pretenses, the man's vaccine status had nothing to do with his death; rather, he supposedly died in a fatal crash between a train and vehicle. First, we removed Carlson's stake in the claim and searched for evidence to confirm or deny whether a 47-year-old man from Kearney, which is about 130 miles west of Lincoln, died in a vehicle-train collision since the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak in early 2020. Using a digital newspaper archive, we found no stories reporting on such an incident. Next, to investigate the claim's legitimacy regarding the Fox News host, we obtained an archived version of the Aug. 13 show of Tucker Carlson Tonight via the nonprofit Internet Archive. Based on that show's transcript, Carlson did not mention Kearney, Nebraska for any reason, including the alleged scenario about a resident's death there. (Furthermore, we concluded Carlson did not mention the town on any other on-air segments since the archive began documenting his footage, according to the database.) We cross-referenced that finding with Fox News' transcript of Carlson's Aug. 13 show, and, again, we found no references to the town or state. And, while it was possible the host shared a similar story about the death of a vaccine recipient whose hometown wasn't Kearney — or that he shared the alleged story under circumstances other than the Aug. 13 Tucker Carlson Tonight show — we are rating this specific claim False considering the evidence above. We reached out Franken's communication team to learn why he made the claim. We have not received a response, but we will update this report when, or if that, changes. Lastly, let this be clear: No credible scientist or research entity has dubbed COVID-19 vaccines unsafe, and serious adverse effects — such as death — after the inoculations are rare. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention stated on its website, as of this writing: In other words, federal guidelines require death investigators nationwide to make an entry in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' VAERS portal whenever a recently vaccinated individual dies — no matter if the inoculation had anything to do with the death. Additionally, anyone can add information to the public reporting tool, making its accuracy questionable. Ultimately, no evidence emerged to substantiate widespread worries that COVID-19 vaccines can alone lead to death. Our other fact checks into Carlson's alleged on-air quotes: (en)
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