I think this was some user/commenter who goes by "Sir Walter Raleigh" that said that. The article is so poorly edited that it took me a while to figure that out. If you look back, first they mention a reader called "Peppa," not in quotes. Then you get a new paragraph where they mention "UK lad" in single quotes. Then the third separate paragraph talks about "Sir Walter Raleigh" in no quotes at all and with no mention of being a user, reader, going by that, etc. It's just generic piss-poor journalism that you'd expect from a sea of incompetent diversity and political hires.
I wonder how many of their readers would even know Sir Walter Raleigh was a figure in history? They probably wouldn't like it if they did, wasn't he an explorer a.k.a. someone stealing land from helpless people of nativeness.
I think this was some user/commenter who goes by "Sir Walter Raleigh" that said that. The article is so poorly edited that it took me a while to figure that out. If you look back, first they mention a reader called "Peppa," not in quotes. Then you get a new paragraph where they mention "UK lad" in single quotes. Then the third separate paragraph talks about "Sir Walter Raleigh" in no quotes at all and with no mention of being a user, reader, going by that, etc. It's just generic piss-poor journalism that you'd expect from a sea of incompetent diversity and political hires.
They were hoping stupid people saw a knighthood and thought the opinion was worth something.
I wonder how many of their readers would even know Sir Walter Raleigh was a figure in history? They probably wouldn't like it if they did, wasn't he an explorer a.k.a. someone stealing land from helpless people of nativeness.
Was it a vaccination back in the day that actually had years of testing and real successful results?
Vaccinations were not invented yet, there were still 178 years to go before the first vaccine, from his death.
I suspect they were trying to trick the less informed by refusing to state that "Sir Walter Raleigh" was just someone's online username.