Conspiracy Theories
Conspiracy.
Just saying the word in conversation can make people politely edge away,
looking for someone who won’t corner them with wild theories about how Elvis,
John F. Kennedy, and Bigfoot are cryogenically frozen in an underground bunker.
Yet
conspiracies do exist. In the corporate world, major companies we buy products
from everyday have been found guilty of conspiring to fix prices and reduce
competition. Just about any planned criminal act committed by more than one
person could be considered a conspiracy, from simple murder-for-hire to the
Watergate break-in.
Many
conspiracy theorists go much further, though, and see a hidden hand behind the
world’s major events. While some of the theories have a grain of truth to them,
conspiracy theories are impossible to disprove, because the hardcore believers
will find some way to rationalize away evidence that contradicts their beliefs.
Eyewitnesses who dispute their conclusions are mistaken—or part of the
conspiracy.
At least
that's what they want you to think ..
The 9/11 Conspiracies
The
evidence is overwhelming that the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, were
indeed the result of a conspiracy. There's no doubt about it: A close (or even
cursory) look at the evidence makes it clear that it was carefully planned and
executed by conspirators. The question, of course, is who those conspirators
were. Osama bin Laden and the crew of (mostly Saudi) hijackers were part of the
conspiracy, but what about President Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney? Did
top Bush advisors, including Paul Wolfowitz and Donald Rumsfeld, either
collaborate with bin Laden, or intentionally allow the attacks to happen? Put
another way, was it an inside job? Conspiracy theorists believe so, and point
to a catalog of supposed inconsistencies in the "official version" of
the attacks. Many of the technical conspiracy claims were debunked by Popular
Mechanics magazine in March 2005, while other claims are refuted by simple
logic: If a hijacked airplane did not crash into the Pentagon, as is often
claimed, then where is Flight 77 and its passengers? Are they with the Roswell
aliens at Hangar 18? In many conspiracy theories, bureaucratic incompetence is
often mistaken for conspiracy. Our government is so efficient, knowledgeable,
and capable—so the reasoning goes—that it could not possibly have botched the
job so badly in detecting the plot ahead of time or responding to the attacks.
I find that hard to believe.
Princess Diana's Murder
Within
hours of Princess Diana's death on Aug. 31, 1997, in a Paris highway tunnel,
conspiracy theories swirled. As was the case with the death of John F. Kennedy,
the idea that such a beloved and high-profile figure could be killed so
suddenly was a shock. This was especially true of Princess Diana; royalty die
of old age, political intrigue, or eating too much rich food; they don't get
killed by a common drunk driver. Unlike many conspiracy theories, though, this
one had a billionaire promoting it: Mohamed Al-Fayed, the father of Dodi
Al-Fayed, who was killed along with Diana. Al-Fayed claims that the accident
was in fact an assassination by British intelligence agencies, at the request
of the Royal Family. Al-Fayed's claims were examined and dismissed as baseless
by a 2006 inquiry; the following year, at Diana's inquest, the coroner stated
that "The conspiracy theory advanced by Mohamed Al Fayed has been minutely
examined and shown to be without any substance." On April 7 of this year,
the coroner's jury concluded that Diana and Al-Fayed were unlawfully killed due
to negligence by their drunken chauffer and pursuing paparazzi.
Subliminal Advertising
Ever been
watching a movie and suddenly get the munchies? Or sitting on your sofa
watching TV and suddenly get the irresistible urge to buy a new car? If so, you
may be the victim of a subliminal advertising conspiracy! Proponents include
Wilson Bryan Key (author of "Subliminal Seduction") and Vance Packard
(author of "The Hidden Persuaders"), both of whom claimed that
subliminal (subconscious) messages in advertising were rampant and damaging.
Though the books caused a public outcry and led to FCC hearings, much of both
books have since been discredited, and several key "studies" of the
effects of subliminal advertising were revealed to have been faked. In the
1980s, concern over subliminal messages spread to bands such as Styx and Judas
Priest, with the latter band even being sued in 1990 for allegedly causing a
teen's suicide with subliminal messages (the case was dismissed). Subliminal
mental processing does exist, and can be tested. But just because a person
perceives something (a message or advertisement, for example) subconsciously
means very little by itself. There is no inherent benefit of subliminal
advertising over regular advertising, any more than there would be in seeing a
flash of a commercial instead of the full twenty seconds. Getting a person to
see something for a split-second is easy; filmmakers do it all the time (watch
the last few frames in Hitchcock's classic "Psycho"). Getting a
person to buy or do something based on that split-second is another matter
entirely. (The conspiracy was parodied in the 1980s television show Max
Headroom, in which viewers were exploding after seeing subliminal messages
called "blipverts.")
The Moon Landing Hoax
In the 1978
film Capricorn One, American astronauts and NASA faked a Mars landing. Though a
mediocre film, it was an interesting idea, and one that would endure for
decades. In 2001, Fox television aired the program "Conspiracy Theory: Did
We Land on the Moon?," which rehashed many discredited
"discrepancies" between the official version of the moon landing and
photographs of the landing. (Curiously, they never explain why NASA would
distribute photographs that would "prove" that they had faked the
moon landing.) Web sites such as BadAstronomy.com have pages and pages of
point-by-point, detailed refutations of the Fox claims. Of course, even if
there was some credible evidence showing that the 1969 Apollo moon landing was
a hoax, conspiracy theorists must also account for later moon missions,
involving a dozen astronauts. And there's the issue of the hundreds of pounds
of moon rocks that have been studied around the world and verified as of
extraterrestrial origin… how did NASA get the rocks if not during a moon
landing? Many astronauts have been offended by the implication that they faked
their accomplishments. In fact in 2002, when conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel
confronted Buzz Aldrin and called him a "coward and a liar" for
faking the moon landings, the 72-year-old punched Sibrel in the jaw.
Paul McCartney's Death
According
to many stories and conspiracy theories that circulated in the late 1960s,
Beatles guitarist Paul McCartney died in 1966. The remaining members of the
Beatles—along with their manager and others—conspired to keep McCartney's death
a secret, going so far as to hire a look-alike and sound-alike to take his
place in the band. Well, kind of: In a case of seriously twisted logic (even by
conspiracy theory standards) the conspirators in this case took great pains to
keep the press and public from finding out about McCartney's demise—yet they
also wanted fans to know about it, and placed clever clues in album covers and
music giving details about McCartney's death. For example, on the cover of the
Abbey Road album, all four Beatles are photographed striding across a zebra
crossing, but only McCartney is barefoot, and out of step with the other three.
This must mean something, right? Despite public denials by the band, fans
couldn't just let it be, and came together to look for more clues.
John F. Kennedy’s Assassination
John F.
Kennedy was killed in 1963 in a Dallas motorcade. Who killed Kennedy? Most
(though not all) conspiracy theorists acknowledge that Lee Harvey Oswald shot
Kennedy from a book depository. Beyond this fact lies a vast area of conspiracy
theory that has spawned endless speculation and hundreds of books, articles,
and films. Was there a second assassin, perhaps one at a nearby "grassy
knoll"? And if Oswald did act alone, who gave him the orders? Activists
against Fidel Castro? Organized crime bosses? A jealous husband upset with
Kennedy's philandering? Though the Warren Commission report concluded that
Oswald acted alone, a 1979 report by The House Select Committee on
Assassinations suggested that there was in fact a conspiracy, and likely more
than one shooter. In such a complex and sensational case, the conspiracy
theories will live on.
The Roswell Crash Cover-Up
There is
one fact that almost all skeptics and believers agree on: Something crashed on
a remote ranch outside of Roswell, New Mexico in 1947. The government at first
claimed it was some sort of saucer, then retracted the statement and claimed it
was really a weather balloon. Yet the best evidence suggests that it was
neither a flying saucer nor a weather balloon, but instead a high-altitude,
top-secret military balloon dubbed Project Mogul. As it turns out, descriptions
of the wreckage first reported by the original eyewitnesses very closely match
photos of the Project Mogul balloons, down to the silvery finish and strange
symbols on its side. The stories about crashed alien bodies did not surface
until decades later and in fact no one considered the Roswell crash as anything
extraterrestrial or unusual until thirty years later, when a book on the topic
was published. There was indeed a cover-up, but it did not hide a crashed
saucer, instead it hid a Cold War-era spying program.
Protocols of the Elders of Zion
"The
Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion" is a hoaxed book that purported
to reveal a Jewish conspiracy to achieve world domination. It first appeared in
Russia in 1905, and described how Christians' morality, finances, and health
would be targeted by a small group of powerful Jews. The idea that there is a
Jewish conspiracy is nothing new, of course, and has been repeated by many
prominent people including Henry Ford and Mel Gibson. In 1920, Henry Ford paid
to have half a million copies of "The Protocols of the Elders of
Zion" published, and in the 1930s, the book was used by the Nazis as
justification for its genocide against Jews (in fact, Adolph Hitler referred to
the "Protocols" in his book "Mein Kampf"). Though the book
has been completely discredited as a hoax and forgery, it is still in print and
remains widely circulated around the world.
Satanic Cults
Throughout
the 1980s and early 1990s, a rash of child abuse cases horrified America.
Children accused adults of ritual rapes, torture, and abuse, and the news media
reported the sensational stories. Often the accusations included charges of
Satanism. The pinnacle was Geraldo Rivera's infamous NBC special "Devil
Worship: Exposing Satan's Underground," which aired on Oct. 28, 1988.
Rivera relied on self-proclaimed "Satanism experts," misleading and
inaccurate statistics, crimes with only tenuous links to Satanism, and
sensationalized media reports. In what was the largest viewership for a
documentary in television history, Rivera claimed that an organized, Satanic
conspiracy was at work killing babies, murdering innocents, and conducting
ghastly rituals. "There are over one million Satanists in this
country," Rivera said, adding that "The odds are, [they] are in your
town." Rivera presented no proof; the lack of evidence was seen as proof
of how well organized and shrewd the Satanic conspiracy really was. Yet little
evidence supports claims about Satanic cults or conspiracies. In a 1992 report
on ritual crime, FBI agent Kenneth Lanning concluded that the rampant rumors of
ritual murders, cannibalism, and kidnapping were unfounded. Phillips Stevens,
Jr., associate professor of anthropology at the State University of New York at
Buffalo, said that the widespread allegations of crimes by Satanists
"constitute the greatest hoax perpetrated upon the American people in the
twentieth century."
Big Pharma
Almost
everybody (except investors) loves to hate the drug companies. Drugs cost too
much, drug company profits are obscene, and it seems that every few months some
drug once claimed to be safe is yanked off the shelf after patients die. It's
little wonder that the drug industry ("Big Pharma") is looked upon
with suspicion. But some proponents of "alternative medicine" believe
that drug companies actually conspire to keep people sick to reap profits. For
example, Kevin Trudeau (bestselling author of “Natural Cures They Don’t Want
You To Know About”) claims that important medical information is being kept
hidden by a conspiracy between the medical establishment and big drug
companies. According to Trudeau, "There are certain groups, including...
the drug industry... that don’t want people to know about cures for
diseases..." Actress and model Jenny McCarthy appeared recently on
"Larry King Live," accusing doctors and the pharmaceutical industry
of conspiring to suppress evidence of a link between childhood vaccines and
autism.
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