Monday, January 4, 2010

Video: 33 Conspiracy Theories That Turned Out To Be True, What Every Person Should Know…







Dprogram.net

Conspiracy theory is a term that originally was a neutral descriptor for any claim of civil, criminal or political conspiracy. However, it has come almost exclusively to refer to any fringe theory which explains a historical or current event as the result of a secret plot by conspirators of almost superhuman power and cunning.  To conspire means “to join in a secret agreement to do an unlawful or wrongful act or to use such means to accomplish a lawful end.”  The term “conspiracy theory” is frequently used by scholars and in popular culture to identify secret military, banking, or political actions aimed at stealing power, money, or freedom, from “the people”.

To many, conspiracy theories are just human nature.  Not all people in this world are honest, hard working and forthcoming about their intentions.  Certainly we can all agree on this.  So how did the term “conspiracy theory” get grouped in with fiction, fantasy and folklore?  Maybe that’s a conspiracy, just kidding.  Or am I?

Skeptics are important in achieving an objective view of reality, however, skeptism is not the same as reinforcing the official storyline.  In fact, a conspiracy theory can be argued as an alternative to the official or “mainstream” story of events.  Therefore, when skeptics attempt to ridicule a conspiracy theory by using the official story as a means of proving the conspiracy wrong, in effect, they are just reinforcing the original “mainstream” view of history, and actually not being skeptical.  This is not skeptism, it is just a convenient way for the establishment view of things to be seen as the correct version, all the time, every time.  In fact, it is common for “hit pieces” or “debunking articles” to pick extremely fringe and not very populated conspiracy theories.  This in turn makes all conspiracies on a subject matter look crazy.  Skeptics magazine and Popular Mechanics, among many others, did this with 9/11.  They referred to less than 10% of the many different conspiracy theories about 9/11 and picked the less popular ones, in fact, they picked the fringe, highly improbable points that only a few people make.  This was used as the “final investigation” for looking into the conspiracy theories.  Convenient, huh?

In fact, if one were to look into conspiracy theories, they will largely find that thinking about a conspiracy is associated with lunacy and paranoia.  Some websites suggest it as an illness.  It is also not surprising to see so many people on the internet writing about conspiracy theories in a condescending tone, usually with the words “kool-aid,” “crack pot,” or “nut job” in their articulation.  This must be obvious to anyone that emotionally writing about such serious matter insults the reader more than the conspiracy theorist because there is no need to resort to this kind of behavior.  It is employed often with an “expert” who will say something along the lines of, “for these conspiracies to be true, you would need hundreds if not thousands of people to be involved.  It’s just not conceivable.”

I find it extremely odd that the assumption is on thousands of participants in a conspiracy.  I, for one, find it hard to believe any conspiracy involving more than a handful of people but the fact remains that there have been conspiracies in our world, proven and not made up, that involved many hundreds of people.  It’s not a matter of opinion, it’s a matter of fact.

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11 comments:

  1. One of the best questions I've ever heard posed about this subject is this:

    "Please explain the difference between a long-range business plan and a conspiracy?"

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  2. It's like the very existence of finance. If we did that, mostly their judges would call it swindle, counterfeiting, fraud, false pretenses, villain, clink.

    They do it, traditional genius, shrewd business, Forbes, Fed, White House aide, Honored Son, tomb overlooking the Saints . . .

    Sure.

    Abolish it.

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  3. This should be required reading (and watching) for every American. These "conspiracies" read like the best spy/espionage novel because the best spy novels are in fact, mostly based on fact. Imagine that.

    I know if I sent this article around to most I know only a few would take the time to read and absorb the material. ~sigh

    PS: Wonder how long it will take for the "great global warming scam" to make the list. You know the one where the solution to climate change is to punish the peons for breathing and not the corporate killers for polluting the planet.

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  4. I sent this to my email group and guarantee none read it...only commented based on their prior bias: " just because I'm biased against conspiracy theory doesn't mean I don't understand why it happens. Projective hypothesis is Psych 1A stuff and suggests sensory apparatus of "higher" vertebrates tend to complete the incomplete ..." Clearly he didn't even look at the list.

    Tagging a subject with a perjorative label is a very successful ploy. Few people have enough sense to reconsider an issue after they've made a snap judgement. Propagandists all over the world clearly rejoice!

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  5. I've often thought it was a OCD thing. Taking them out of the comfort. Then if presented with the proof they shift to classic denial. At least for some.

    That's why I got on the alcoholic kick with Eugene O'Neill. It's like American needs to go through a series of steps of acceptance, withdrawl, and take a responsibility in changing one thing in their lives in opposition to this merry little organization sponsored, road to ruin.

    How we have survived so far is nothing short of miraculous in my mind. Again I say everyday is another miracle. Why it continues to be business as usual is bizaare.

    JG always says "How much more..." Mr. M says he thinks of giving up on waking the masses from stupor. The definition of insanity.......

    IF ONE IS TRUE, THEY ALL ARE...

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  6. I'll tell you, considering how wrapped up in mythologizing, spin and delusion most people are, I'm purely amazed every time I'm on a plane that manages to leave the ground LOL

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  7. As for MKUltra, Olson was more likely pushed out the window. Suicide is standard coverup story. Dead men don't talk.
    According to the book "Acid Dreams" and other accounts like "Storming Heaven" what really happened to state intel with these experiments on LSD was they found it destroyed chains of military command, and the British field experiment films today show just that happening, alot of goofy troops climbing trees to look at birds, not paranoia and freak outs. Intel had to scuttle LSD for good reason. They did all kind of experiments on heavy tranquilizers, some of them used today by the military. Connection to underwear bomber in a trance? In the end the only promising "truth serum" was THC, but it usually wins the dope competitions for everything.
    Giving acid to foreign leaders to discredit them didn't work out as planned because some US pitcher threw a no hitter while tripping, Jock Sutherland surfed Waimea bay alone at 25 feet on full moon on Orange Sunshine, stuff like that, where people tended to do some very amazing things and freed themselves from the old paradigms. The foreign leaders probably would have come across as engaging humanists, yikes.
    Of course revisionists want to leave the public with a huge LSD scare story and they pretty much go unchallenged today.

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  8. "because some US pitcher threw a no hitter while tripping, Jock Sutherland surfed Waimea bay alone at 25 feet on full moon on Orange Sunshine, stuff like that"

    like going for a beer or two or three with zero dinero in your pocket, playing pool instead, winning and winning until you've had your fill. For me, it always worked like a charm. It's a game called concentration, activates parts of your brain that are otherwise left untouched. But where's the damned OFF switch? See my last "article" for more of the same. The title kinda says it all.

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  9. LOL Curt. I did that too! I had to laugh when I was sleeping in the U-Store-it where my stuff was kept and playing pool all day to eat and drink. HAVE STICK WILL TRAVEL...

    I remembered the Seifeld episode when George goes celibate and starts having superior brain access and mental cognition. I am living proof and I believe!!!
    Not only is it apparent to me personally but it explains why I get a dozen SPAM everyday selling VIAGRA/CIALIS.

    One of the largest dumbdown OPS next to Fleuoride.

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  10. The on switch in the front of the brain seems to have a keylock fitting the LSD molecule. Researchers have been unable to find LSD a few hours later in the body. The effects wear off after about twelve hours.

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  11. How odd that the meme "conspiracy theory" has become a pejorative or derisive term. Hell, ALL republics (which the USA purports to be) are a "conspiracy."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conspiracy_%28civil%29

    The word "theory" implies that you can't definitively PROVE the "conspiracy" (YET). "Gravity" is a "theory," so is "evolution."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory

    Graft these two words together, and voila! "Conspiracy theory!"
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conspiracy_theory

    Methinks this involves our "belief system," and most of our "belief systems" are fairly simple: we believe what we WANT to believe, we disbelieve what we DO NOT want to believe. Every (good) fiction writer (probably) knows this: "suspension of disbelief." A thumbnail definition: "faith is believin' in what you know ain't so."

    Maybe "altered states" help us crack some kind of cognitive barrier by altering what we think our senses are telling us. I dunno.

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