It was “the biggest fake news in world history”

After two years of horrific stories about alleged mass graves of indigenous children in Catholic boarding schools across Canada, a series of excavations at suspicious sites have revealed nothing. There isn't any human remains

– reports the American New York Post.

A group of native Indians “Minegoziibe Anishinabe” (also known as Pine Creek First Nation) excavated 14 sites over four weeks this summer in the basement of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows Catholic Church near Pine Creek Boarding School in Manitoba.

They searched where, according to the media, also in Poland, accusing and repeating the terrible story, “there are children's graves”, because the radar detected “anomalies” in the layers of the earth there. No such graves have been found there or at any other school.

I don't like using the word fraud because it is too strong, but there are too many baseless lies circulating on this issue.

– stated in an interview with “The Times” Jacques Rouillard, professor emeritus of the Faculty of History at the University of Montreal. He added that “a lot has been said, serious accusations made without evidence.”

Unfortunately, so far the indigenous people in Canada who have made these accusations have not commented on the fact that no graves were found.

Honest Western media is already talking about this case as… “the biggest fake news story in Canadian and world history.”

The targets of the attacks, which began two years ago, were Catholic schools in Pine Creek and Kamloops, owned by the state but run by the Church since the 1880s. In total, around 150,000 children attended the activities throughout its period of operation.

After the reproduction of fake news, it started a wave of social hysteria, fueled by the media. Laying flowers in front of the school, teddy bears and hearts, demands an immediate apology from the Church – even though there is no evidence. This happened in Canada a devastating wave of church destruction – 80 people became victims of major attacks, acts of vandalism, some were burned. Anti-Catholic hatred spread throughout the world, even to Poland.

Unfortunately, he gave in to this pressure Pope Franciswho apologized and asked for forgiveness.

Tom Flanagana retired professor of political science at the University of Calgary, said in an interview with the New York Post that this was a “moral panic”, similar to the hysteria caused by alleged devil worship in US schools in the 1980s.

People believe things that are untrue or impossible to happen, and they continue to believe them even when no evidence emerges

– said Flanagan.

And this will probably be an interesting topic for social psychologists and analysts of the manipulation of society by large media companies. But today, we have to focus on that a humble request for truth and perhaps an apology to the media in Poland who took part in this operation, whether they knew it or not.

He repeated this information Tomasz Terlikowski: :

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"Reader. Future teen idol. Falls down a lot. Amateur communicator. Incurable student."

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