'One Heck Of A Correction': Texas Tribune Publishes False COVID Numbers For Children
By Amanda Prestigiacomo
Aug 13, 2021
'One Heck Of A Correction': Texas Tribune Publishes False COVID Numbers For Children | The Daily Wire
The Texas Tribune has corrected a glaring error that stated 5,800 children had been hospitalized within a seven-day period in August. The 5,800 figure, however, referred to children hospitalized with COVID-19
since the start of the pandemic.
"An earlier version of this story overstated the number of children who have been hospitalized in Texas recently with COVID-19," the Tribune said in a correction. "The story said over 5,800 children had been hospitalized during a seven-day period in August, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
That number correctly referred to children hospitalized with COVID-19 since the pandemic began."
"In actuality, 783 children were admitted to Texas hospitals with COVID-19 between July 1 and Aug. 9 of this year," the correction noted of the six-week period.
Posting the glaring correction to Twitter, Bloomberg reporter Steven Dennis commented,
"That's one heck of a correction."
According to Fox News, the false number was shared by Washington Post writer Jennifer Rubin, who later deleted her tweet.
"Unconscionable: Over 5,800 children in Texas were newly hospitalized with COVID-19 in the seven-day period ending on Aug. 8, a 37% increase from a week prior. where is the pro-life movement ?? it's now a death cult," Rubin tweeted on Thursday.
Media critic Steve Krakauer blasted the paper for the careless error
and those on the Left propagating fear with the false information.
"TRASH," Krakauer tweeted.
"So the [Texas Tribune] updates their trash, lying, fear-mongering story about hospitalized kids, but what happens when you have trash columnists like Jen Rubin, whose tweet is uncorrected with the actual info? Never trust Texas Tribune, never trust Jen Rubin."
Washington Free Beacon executive editor Brent Scher underscored how far off the error was.
"We reported 5,800 in one week. It was actually 783 in 6 weeks," he mocked the Tribune.
"I did the math here. The claim: 828 hospitalizations a day[.] Reality: 19 a day," he emphasized.
"Only off by about 43x." .....