That is why they are called SECONDARY objects of infallibility rather than primary. I don't think this term has been used in this thread (although I may have missed it).
Not even close:
My previous post chose to challenge Canterella with an impossible task to make the point clearer to her:
Show how something which is not part of faith or morals (e.g., canonizations) can be the object of infallibility.
Just prior to that, in the previous post which she ignored, I explained how canonizations as dogmatic fact (i.e., possibly infallible, or at least theologically certain by indirect -or secondary if you prefer- links to revelation, as in the case of St. Jerome) are extremely limited:
What is the link to divine revelation with Mother Theresa, JPII, John XXIII, and Escriva?
Nothing.
Those canonizations could not possibly be infallible.
Canteralla wants to conflate, through a sloppy admixture, the "intrinsic connection" between canonizations and the dogma that saints are to be venerated.
But that confused rationale begs the question: Who are the saints?
The dogma certainly could not pertain to JPII and the rest who have no connection to revelation.