“Dear Covington Catholic students, I’d like to invite you to the Polish Parliament. After watching this video, I am now standing up for these wrongfully accused young men and all of you!,” wrote Dominik Tarczyński, Conservative member of the Polish Sejm.
“You are very welcome to come and speak out what You believe in,” he added. In an interview Tuesday with LifeSiteNews, Tarczyński urged the white teenagers to remain “brave”.
“Those pushing this narrative cannot use a logical argument, so they try to push us aside and delegitimize our voices,” he said. “They try to restrict even our rights.”
He said the notion of openness, diversity “and all this humanistic, secularist rhetoric — when you simply look at the history of our continent, the history of Europe it was logically based — built on Christian Faith and a culture derived from that Faith”.
In the case of Europe, it is the battle to maintain a Christian identity, Tarczyński explained.
The Washington Post meanwhile has had to issue yet another retraction after spreading fake news claiming that the Native American “victim” Nathan Phillips served in the Vietnam War. Phillips never served in Vietnam but lied about it to raise money for a documentary.
On Monday, The Washington Post published a correction Phillips was never deployed to Vietnam.
“Correction: Earlier versions of this story incorrectly said that Native American activist Nathan Phillips fought in the Vietnam War. Phillips served in the US Marines from 1972 to 1976 but was never deployed to Vietnam,” the correction reads.