Sam Hyde and false flags are hardly the only hoaxes to follow the mass murders in Sutherland Springs, in which more than two dozen very real people, including an 18-month-old child and three generations of a single family, were killed. They are everywhere. Fake images suggesting the shooter was a member of an anti-fascist movement made their way to a news site controlled by the Russian government. On Facebook, a man found the personal page of a woman who was reported to have died at the church and posted to it: "Are you real or a simulation by intelligence agencies?"