No Surprise Here! "Fake News" comes from Macedonian teens with BMW's--not the NY Times (LOL!)

Fantine

Dona Quixote
Site Supporter
Jun 11, 2005
37,129
13,198
✟1,090,402.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
Despite the allegations of a small sampling of contrarians, NBC has learned that "fake news" during the campaign did not come from the NY Times (!) nor the Washington Post (!) That's just some American-made "fake news" the contrarians are trying to distract people with.

No. Video interviews indicate it came from the town of Vele, Macedonia. One teen earned $60K in 6 months and drives a BMW.

Their best customers? No surprise there, either!
Dimitri says he's earned at least $60,000 in the past six months — far outstripping his parents' income and transforming his prospects in a town where the average annual wage is $4,800. He is one of the more successful fake news pushers in the area.

His main source of cash? Supporters of America's president-elect.

"Nothing can beat Trump's supporters when it comes to social media engagement," he says. "So that's why we stick with Trump."


How Macedonian teens earn — and spend — thousands from fake news

How does "fake news" (or trying to pin "fake news" on legitimate news sources) relate to Catholicism?

James 3:8-12 b9With it we bless the Lord and Father, and with it we curse human beings who are made in the likeness of God.10From the same mouth come blessing and cursing. This need not be so, my brothers.11Does a spring gush forth from the same opening both pure and brackish water?12Can a fig tree, my brothers, produce olives, or a grapevine figs? Neither can salt water yield fresh