Canada’s mass-graves scam reveals cost of media bias
A Canadian newspaper admitted that no human remains were found at a Kamloops residential school despite 2021 claims sparking church arsons and costing taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.
In 2021, at the height of racial tensions following the George Floyd killing, Canadian media outlets amplified a sensational claim that remains of 215 First Nations children had been discovered in unmarked graves at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia.
The Kamloops Indian Band issued a press release stating it had confirmed the findings using ground-penetrating radar technology. Chief Rosanne Casimir claimed at the time that some victims were as young as three years old, asserting these were the final resting places of children at the Catholic-run institution.
The reality tells a different story. No human remains have ever been found at Kamloops, as New York Post reports.
Media Admits Failure After Years of Amplification
Canada’s largest daily newspaper, The Globe and Mail, published a carefully worded retraction on Saturday acknowledging that no public confirmation of human remains has been discovered. The editorial titled “There is no reconciliation without truth” grudgingly admitted the media failed to scrutinize the original claims.
Eight paragraphs into its retraction, the newspaper conceded that early reporting simply stated as fact that 215 children’s remains had been found, with many stories including references to mass graves that went beyond even the band chief’s initial assertions.
Yet even while admitting error, the editorial speculated that perhaps someday it will be proven that hundreds of unmarked graves exist at Kamloops. The narrative remains intact despite the complete absence of evidence.
Hundreds of Millions Spent, Destination Unknown
Canadian taxpayers have been forced to spend hundreds of millions of dollars funding First Nations groups to investigate soil anomalies at various locations. The government admits it has no accounting for where this money ultimately went.
The financial fraud pales in comparison to the violence unleashed against Christian communities. Canada’s state broadcaster CBC documented 33 churches burned to the ground between 2021 and 2024, with 24 confirmed as arson attacks.
The CBC itself suggested that discoveries of potential burial sites at former residential schools may have motivated the attacks. In reality, the media hysteria over an unverified story lit the fuse for anti-Christian violence that targeted Catholic and other denomination churches indiscriminately.
Pattern Mirrors American Media Failures
The Kamloops hoax follows a familiar pattern seen in American media, where progressive political narratives shape reporting regardless of facts on the ground. While George Floyd’s death was real, the broader narrative that black Americans face casual killing by white police officers has been equally irresponsible and has led to widespread violence.
High-profile cases typically involve individuals violently resisting arrest, facts that disappear beneath inflammatory coverage designed to advance ideological goals rather than inform the public.
The Globe and Mail’s evasive retraction shows Canadian media has learned little from its role in inciting violence and enabling what appears to be massive financial fraud. The narrative survives even when the facts fail to materialize.
With information from New York Post