The stunning media bias directed against a group of Trump-supporting Catholic kids who were confronted by a black separatist hate group and a Native American group led by a mendacious, drum-beating elder in Washington, D.C., last Friday has abated but not gone away.

Some media outlets have backed away from their erroneous takes, while others are still stubbornly clinging to the idea that the kids were in the wrong and the Native Americans who were harassing them were somehow their victims.

As bad as that is, a few others have actually doubled down with more smears aimed at defaming the kids’ school, Covington Catholic High, in an effort to feed their confirmation bias that the kids are a bunch of racist redneck hillbillies.

The New York Daily News and the Daily Mail stepped up to the plate in a big way.

Disgusting smear from the @NYDailyNews sports desk that gets almost all the facts wrong to try to extend the smear against these kids. Someone should be fired for this. https://t.co/YW1aYHE1AJ — (((AG))) (@AGHamilton29) January 22, 2019

Here's a 2015 photo of #CovingtonCatholic's fine, upstanding student body clad in blackface at one of their basketball games harassing an opposing Black player. pic.twitter.com/6VZST6BL40 — Tariq Nasheed 🇺🇸 (@tariqnasheed) January 21, 2019

The photo “is said to be featuring Covington Catholic High School students clad in blackface during a 2015 basketball game,” the New York Daily News passive aggressively reported. The pic “made the rounds on Twitter Monday morning amid last week’s Indigenous Peoples March controversy,” the Daily News sports staff added (because no one wanted to sign their name to this nonsense).

Number one: The article claims that the photo is from 2015, but it’s apparently from 2011. So despite the article’s contention that the photo “won’t help Kentucky student Nick Sandmann’s case,” it has nothing to do with him or any of the other kids who were in D.C. for the March for Life. They would have been in elementary school at the time.

Another person who was at that game (7 years ago!!!): https://t.co/GRRLoXcr06 — (((AG))) (@AGHamilton29) January 22, 2019

Number two: It’s called a “blackout” game, you dummies. This has been going on at school games since at least 2008, according to this New York Times report:

No team has pulled off the blackout with as much aplomb as baseball’s White Sox last Tuesday night — the same night that Middle Tennessee State’s football team celebrated an appearance on ESPN2 with a blackout of its own. Fans flipping channels might have thought the color had gone out on their flat screens. With a day’s notice, a crowd of 40,354 arrived in black at U.S. Cellular Field for a tie-breaker game with the Twins. The team handed out 40,000 black towels. It cast a fresh, eerie and somewhat intimidating backdrop to Chicago’s 1-0 victory.

“When you had all the fans in black, waving their towels, it almost looked like a stadium full of bats,” said Brooks Boyer, the team’s vice president and chief marketing officer. The fans loved it, and hope that a tradition has been born. It was a fun new tradition until the Trumpy Covington Catholic High School kids did it, apparently. Then it became a deplorable minstrel show proving once and for all that the high school is full of irredeemable racists. Number Three: Adam Fatkin, a player for the opposing team who went on to play basketball for Rockhurst University, said the black guy in the picture wasn’t being racially taunted. In fact, he was a good friend. This picture is being completely taken out of context. The player in this photo is my former teammate and like a brother to me. He lived with me for ~3 years. He is not being harassed because the color of his skin. — Adam Fatkin (@fatkin42) January 21, 2019 No, they were there in order to cheer against the opposing team, us. If I remember correctly it was a black out game, as a result they were decked out in black. I’m simply saying that you’re taking this picture out of context. You went back and found this picture from 2011 and https://t.co/eRHFHvc1JJ — Adam Fatkin (@fatkin42) January 22, 2019 using it in order to fit a certain narrative.When he used it as his profile picture and posted it on instagram ~8 years ago no one had any problem then. There wasn’t a problem because everyone looked at it for what it is, a student section yelling at an opposing player, that’s it — Adam Fatkin (@fatkin42) January 22, 2019 Once again, the media saw a short video clip and a photo and without bothering to check, put the worst possible spin on it.

An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified Adam Fatkin as a student at Covington High School.