In a investigative investigation that raised a degree of controversy, the British newspaper "The Guardian" revealed a Facebook campaign that was being conducted by Canada, Australia, the United States, Austria, Israel and Nigeria, from a group that uses 21 Facebook accounts, and reaches millions of users in it so far Broadcasting thousands of fabricated news stories, aimed at defaming and tarnishing Arab, Islamic and European political symbols, which combines them - that is, these symbols collect - taking fair positions on Middle Eastern issues.

The investigative investigation launched by the "Transparency Project" group, inside the "Guardian" newspaper, and took the title "inside the hate factory, how Facebook boosts the profits of the extreme right." The investigation revealed that the conspiratorial group has focused in its campaign so far on polluting the reputation of prominent names, including a party leader British workers known for his sympathy for the Palestinian cause and his criticism of Israel Jeremy Corbin, the Muslim mayor of London Siddiq Khan, the first Australian Muslim minister Mahrin Farooqi, the Canadian pro-refugee Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and others, also revealed that the group aimed to export a negative stereotype of Muslims, and that Overall, he harmed them as "terrorists" and "violators of children's rights" and "a threat to white culture and Western civilization," according to the expressions used by the newspaper.

And given that the "conspiracy theory" became notorious, and because the story of "fourth generation wars" became boring over repeated, the "Guardian" thankfully decided to practice the rules of investigative inquiry exactly as the "book" said: "to follow the leads between Israel, Canada and Britain" And the rest of the countries, and to send the published material to specialized media analysis centers that follow the most accurate scientific method, and to send its editors east and west behind the threads of the story, and to confront Mr. Mark Zuckerberg and his men with what they have reached in the investigation, and convey honestly to their readers their responses to it ».

The newspaper discovered, with the assistance of the University of Queensland's Digital Technology Research Center, that the published material belonged to 10 semi-identical fabricated sources, bogus titles such as "Online Politics" and "Free Press Front", and according to the professor at this university, Axel Bronze, this "this The pages were made for profit, and spreading hate is a side product in the story. It is a conclusion that does not reduce the view of racism in Western society, but rather recalls the Arab proverb which says “an excuse worse than sin”, meaning that hate trade has become so popular in some of these societies Which has become a popular market receive this hateful goods in it.

The Guardian did not stop when analyzing the published material, as indicated previously, on the importance and seriousness of this, but rather followed an Israeli member of the Facebook conspiratorial network, his name is Ariel pamphlets, and he disguised himself in the name of Ariel 1238, and I followed the thread until I reached him at his apartment in Tel Aviv, and when I asked him On his relationship to the network he denied, but after the Guardian journalists left the house, he joined them on the street to ask them, How did you know me?

The world's most popular social media site has refused to prevent "conspirators" from using its platform to promote hate, and the network has only "removed marginal pages that do not affect these organized campaigns."

Hate trade is becoming popular in some societies

To the extent that it has a market that receives these

The hateful goods in it.