Yesterday the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to block President Biden’s OSHA vaccine mandate for companies employing 100 or more people.
The Nation’s justice correspondent Elie Mystal turned that ruling into this:
I want everybody to remember that the Supreme Court has said the government doesn't have the authority to make people wear a mask when it later says it *does* have the authority to force women to give birth against their will.
— Elie Mystal (@ElieNYC) January 13, 2022
The “justice correspondent” doesn’t seem to have an accurate reading on what happened at the Supreme Court yesterday:
The Supreme Court said absolutely nothing about masks. https://t.co/Nc1MRikLij
— D.E. (@tkdylan) January 14, 2022
No they didn’t, but judging from the replies many lefties don’t realize that or just don’t care for the sake of a fresh narrative.
When did the Supreme Court say this? https://t.co/Lmm9TLOC2a
— January Family Vacation (@HashtagGriswold) January 13, 2022
If they have, why are there loads of government-implemented mask mandates still in effect?
— January Family Vacation (@HashtagGriswold) January 13, 2022
This tweet is now up to 20.9K retweets, despite it not being remotely what the Supreme Court ruled pic.twitter.com/eoCXirtrQB
— January Family Vacation (@HashtagGriswold) January 14, 2022
Not that we’re shocked or anything.
You don't have to wear a mask while giving birth. #Bonus
Also, what the heck are you talking about? pic.twitter.com/cJCWcf3lDF— Sandy 〽️ (@RightGlockMom) January 13, 2022
The “correct” kind of misinformation is still allowed on social media, obviously.
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Related:
For some reason, Elie Mystal and Aaron Rupar didn’t fact-check *all* of the SCOTUS justices today