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This article was published on April 16, 2019

Notre Dame fire sparks Twitter conspiracy theories


Notre Dame fire sparks Twitter conspiracy theories

Various commenters on Twitter are using the burning of the beautiful, historic Notre Dame cathedral to further a number of absurd conspiracy theories, ranging from an Anti-Christian arsonist to… actually, that’s the worst of them so far. Conspiracy theories and wild speculation about breaking news are common enough on Twitter, but this one is a cut too deep.

In case you haven’t yet heard, a fire in Notre Dame de Paris has destroyed a large portion of the church today. While firefighters were able to save the towers, at last report the majority of the building is gone. Currently workers are attempting to salvage art still inside the cathedral. Officials have not yet released the cause of the fire, though they have implied it may be connected to the renovation work going on in the cathedral at the time.

As you’d expect, this tragic event is already attracting some pretty unpleasant speculation about who, or what, could have caused the blaze. The top theory seems to be centered around a series of attacks on Christian churches throughout Europe. Several people, including Stefan Molyneux and InfoWars’ Paul Joseph Watson have speculated these incidents could be connected to Notre Dame’s blaze.

Earlier today, a French commentator tried to raise the same possibility on Fox News — and credit to Fox News, they shut down the interview immediately and refused to speculate on the cause of the fire. But the idea that the burning of Notre Dame might be related to these previous attacks has been pervasive.

There have also been a number of tweets speculating the fire was started by someone of another religious affiliation. Watson has begun pointing out people who’ve reacted to the fire on Facebook with smiley-face emoji.

Okay. And?

A tweet from a site called JihadWatch resurfaced a story from 2016 about a woman who’d been arrested for an attempted car bombing outside the historic church. She was apparently sentenced today, meaning the timing of the story appears to be an unfortunate coincidence (Robert Spencer, the site’s director, said the tweet was scheduled earlier this morning, before the blaze started), but it’s also making the rounds.

Another theory is that the blaze was started by President Emmanuel Macron to take media focus off of him:

An article from InfoWars cited a tweet from a reporter who claimed a friend who knew the staff claimed the fire was deliberate. The tweet has since been deleted. Basically, if you’re looking for information about the Notre Dame fire, you’re going to get flooded with speculation from people who believe the fire was at the very least intentional and malicious.

Can we at least know the status of the rose windows before we start creating a suspicious person responsible for their destruction? We’re talking about the gutting of a building that’s been standing for hundreds of years — the rush to gobble at its still-smoldering bones feels incredibly unpleasant.

On an similarly sad note, YouTube apparently confused two terrible events when it put an explainer for 9/11 below live footage of Notre Dame burning. YouTube quickly corrected the mistake, but if we weren’t depressed already, we are now.

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