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For 15 years, Politico had annually named its “Lie of the Year.”
But by December of last year the deceit was so unceasing that the publication named 2025 “The Year of Lies.”
PolitiFact’s Editor-in-Chief Katie Sanders explained the shift by writing, “The concept of truth feels particularly bleak in 2025.” Online forums, she wrote, teem with “artificial intelligence-generated slop that incites rage.” Fabrications from chatbots get folded “into a report card on America’s health” and government leaders “deploy up-is-down narratives at an exhausting clip.”
And after just six weeks, 2026 looks even worse.
Including an incident in Minnesota on Jan. 22, when a photo of the arrest of attorney and activist Nekima Levy Armstrong was posted on X by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and shared by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt. In the image, Levy Armstrong, accused of interrupting a St. Paul church service to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Operation Metro Surge, shows her walking in front of a law-enforcement officer, looking straight ahead.
But just half an hour hence the White House posted a different version. In this image, Levy Armstrong isn’t composed, but coming apart, sobbing. And according to a New York Times image analysis, Levy Armstrong, who is Black, has had her skin darkened.