Canada’s mass graves hoax has finally collapsed, but not with a bang—just a quiet, embarrassed retreat. The Trudeau government has cut funding for its so-called expert committee tasked with finding unmarked graves at the former sites of religious residential schools. And what did that committee find after three years of hysteria, global condemnation, and church burnings?
Not. One. Grave.
Back in 2021, the media went into a frenzy after Indigenous leaders claimed that radar scans had discovered over 200 human remains near a Catholic residential school in Kamloops. The New York Times declared it a “mass grave”. Justin Trudeau went into full virtue-signaling mode, lowering flags, demanding national self-loathing, and subtly justifying the wave of church burnings that followed. Even the Pope got dragged into this staged spectacle, flying to Canada to apologize for crimes that were never proven.
Then came more radar “discoveries”—with no excavations, no evidence, and no accountability. Soon, Trudeau’s Canada was tearing down statues, canceling Canada Day celebrations, and punishing churches—all based on nothing but a politically useful lie.
Now, the facts are out: zero unmarked graves have been found, not just in Kamloops but anywhere in Canada. Yet Trudeau and his media allies refuse to admit the truth. Instead, their new tactic is to pretend it was never about mass graves in the first place—only “unmarked graves,” a normal occurrence in 19th-century cemeteries.
This is what weaponized history looks like. The progressive regime needed a narrative to demonize conservatives and religious institutions while absolving itself of guilt. The real goal was to justify expanding the power of the progressive state, rewrite history, and crush Canada’s last remaining conservative values.
Now, as the hysteria slowly dies out, there are no apologies. No retractions. No accountability. The legacy media, Trudeau’s government, and every academic who pushed this hoax are slipping away in silence, hoping no one notices that the entire thing was built on a lie.