> One of the fundamental tenets of good journalism suggests that you check the
> source of a story and independently verify it before going public with it.
> That is also a good idea for elected officials like Trenton, New Jersey, City
> Councilwoman-at-Large Kathy McBride.
>
> Tuesday night, during a council meeting, Ms. McBride set herself up for
> considerable embarrassment when she wanted to know what the local government
> was doing to combat the outbreak of an STD known as Blue Waffle Disease.
> (Graphic content warning do not Google that term unless you are prepared
> for shocking and very graphic images.)
>
> NJ.com reports that McBride thought the disease (which does not exist)
> deserves the attention of the government. Acting on a call from a man who
> claimed to be a constituent, the councilwoman presented what she believed to
> be the shocking facts about the sexually transmitted disease;
>
>
>
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/04/04/nj-councilwoman-falls-for-blue-
waff
>
le-disease-scam-warning-graphic-
content/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&
> utm_campaign=Share+Buttons
>
>
> It s already claimed 85 lives and there s a case here in Trenton. It is a
> virus that is 10 times greater at this point than the AIDS virus.
>
> There s just one problem here: Nothing about Blue Waffle Disease and what
> Kathy McBride was talking about is real. And the councilwoman could have
> learned that with a simple three-word Internet search.
>
> New Jersey s Trentonian broke the story and on Wednesday, featured it on the
> paper s front page. Their coverage included actual audio of the
> Councilwoman-at-Large speaking in the meeting.
Thanks. I'll pass on searching that term. Brings to mind the old
Dihydrogenmonoxide scam in the early days.