Conspiracy Theories

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My hunch is that we, the human race, are likely being manipulated or at least heavily influenced by aliens of higher intelligence. Whether those are the same aliens that did the genetic engineering or not, I would not venture a guess, since that's all it would be.
Interesting. Manipulated to what end? Or are there multiple factions with differing agendas?
 
My hunch is that we, the human race, are likely being manipulated or at least heavily influenced by aliens of higher intelligence. Whether those are the same aliens that did the genetic engineering or not, I would not venture a guess, since that's all it would be.
The aliens are called cats: How a cat parasite can change your personality

A new study suggests that infection with the cat-borne parasite Toxoplasma gondii could make people more risk-prone and likely to start their own business.

Previous studiesTrusted Source have correlated T. gondii infections with impulsive and risky behavior, as well as with a higher risk of car accidents, mental health issues, substance abuse disorders, and suicide.

Specifically, T. gondii-positive people were “1.4 [times] more likely to major in business and 1.7 [times] more likely to have an emphasis in ‘management and entrepreneurship’ over other business-related emphases.”

Cross post to "Behind the Desk" forum section.
 
There's a recent Guardian article called "Escape the Rabbit Hole: a Conspiracy Theorist Who abandoned His Dangerous Beliefs...
found here: https://www.theguardian.com/society...-theorist-who-abandoned-his-dangerous-beliefs

A non-red-pilled friend mentioned it so I looked it up, copied and pasted the article with my commentary in red italics below.

Brent Lee struggles to explain why he used to believe that a cabal of evil satanic paedophiles was working to establish a new world order. He pauses, looks sheepish, and says: “I cringe at all this now.”

For 15 years, Lee collected signs that so-called Illuminati overlords were controlling global events. He convinced himself that secret societies were running politics, banks, religious institutions and the entertainment industry, and that most terrorist attacks were actually government-organised ritual sacrifices.

One would be foolish to think that groups of very powerful men are not in cahoots trying to use their power and influence to gain advantage and game the system. There are well known organizations, some that are household names, and others of these groups that have regular meetings and are known to exist but keep their agendas hidden to various degrees. No one that has a clue disputed that. These groups include the banking cartels such as the World Bank and the ”Federal Reserve” which is a private firm, and not controlled or audited by the US government, the WEF (World Economic Forum), Council on Foreign Relations, the Bilderbergers, and many others. To think that there aren’t other groups of such powerful elites that have managed to preserve their anonymity is just foolish. One might argue to what degree they are effective in their ability to manipulate world events such as wars, pandemics, economic booms and busts etc. but to think that there are not secret societies along the lines of the skull and bones and freemasons that are clubs for very powerful and influential political and business elites is just silly.

Now he uses a fairly obvious trick of verbal deception by combining the truth with total nonsense in that sentence. The truth is that secret (and not so secret organizations) are very influential in global politics, media, and entertainment. While the complete BS is that most terrorist attacks are government organized ritual sacrifice. While I have heard claims that wars, in addition to being cash cows for the banking and defense industry, are in part blood sacrifices to the devil, and I have heard that many terrorist attacks are actually false flag attacks used to deceive the people into going to war (911, the Bombing of the Maine, Gulf of Tonkin) , I have never EVER heard the theory that terrorist attacks are ritual sacrafices

Hewas also inclined to believe in UFOs, and that Stanley Kubrick staged and directed the filming of the moon landing. (UFOs have been acknowledged by many governments and are well documented in mainstream media) and yes I believe that the moon landings were fabricated on Earth, and likely by Kubrik. He saw satanic symbols in the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony and spent most of his time discussing these theories with an online community of fellow believers. I have never heard of this but one only has to look at Sam Smith’s performance in the last super bowl to see that the satanic symbolism is no longer being veiled.. It’s in your face. Here’s a 30 second clip of his performance of the song “Unholy”.



But in 2018 something shifted, and he began to find the new wave of conspiracy theories increasingly implausible. “I was sick of it. I felt, I can’t deal with hearing this any more because it’s no longer what I believe, so I just logged off the internet,” he says.



Now Lee is trying to help other conspiracy theorists to question their worldview. He will address a conference in Poland on disinformation in October, and has launched a podcast unpicking why he held these beliefs so fervently and why he was so deluded.

Amiable and articulate, Lee is disarmingly willing to admit that he got things spectacularly wrong, but it is still challenging to have a conversation with him about his abandoned belief system. Most of the theories seem so preposterous that the process of trying to understand them becomes exhausting. When I strain to follow the logic, he says: “Don’t try to get me to make it make sense because it doesn’t. This is why I get so embarrassed about what I believed. You just buy into this ideology and think that’s the way the world works.”

His reasons for abandoning the “truther” movement (truthers believe official accounts of big events are designed to conceal the truth from the public) are also hard to slot into a conventional worldview. Lee veers between feeling ashamed and amused by his own convictions while also pointing out that it would be a mistake to dismiss these ideas with an impatient eye roll, because they are very dangerous.
 
part 2:

Versions of the same ideas have gained greater currency in the years since he stepped away from them. In the US, the influence of QAnon I told you years ago that Qanon was obvious BS to me. has shifted from the fringes to the mainstream, and social media has been flooded with the group’s misinformation. A 2020 Ipsos poll found that 17% of Americans believed that “a group of Satan-worshipping elites who run a child sex ring are trying to control our politics and media”. As far as child sex rings go, Epstein was proof that they exist and with all the media coverage about child and sex trafficking, can there be any doubt that these things are happening. Whether they are run by devil worshippers or just greedy people, there is no doubt that they are evil in nature, so does it really matter.





In 2003, Lee was 24, a musician working behind the till in a garage in Peterborough, when he downloaded a series of videos from the internet that offered alternative perspectives on 9/11 and suggested the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers in New York in September 2001 was self-inflicted by the US government, as a way of justifying military action in Afghanistan and Iraq. Anyone that doesn’t know without a doubt that 911 was a false flag attack by the US government is a complete idiot. You have to want to “not know” in order to overlook such a mountain of evidence. This is right up there with denying that JFK was killed by a government conspiracy. His starting point was a strong anti-war stance and a healthy scepticism about politicians’ motivations, but from there he came to believe that a network of secret societies and cults was running the world. Notice they don’t mention the conspiracy theories about WMDs which all turned out to be true.



It is hard to summarise precisely why he made that step – and harder still to fathom his later preoccupation with paedophiles and ritual murders. He attempts to explain when we meet on a weekday afternoon in an empty Bristol wine bar (idle waiters keep glancing over, startled by fragments of conversations about satanic lizards), but I have to email him a few days later to ask him to try to explain again.

His answer remains confusing, but begins with George W Bush and Democrat John Kerry’s membership, when at Yale University, of the Skull and Bones club, a secretive student society that conducts bizarrely morbid rituals. That’s true. And there are a number of very prominent people that have for decades been Bonesmen. When J and I looked at Yale the guide told us that over 50% of underclassmen belong to a secret society. This led him to believe that there were evil politicians interested in satanic rituals. “Once you’ve been swayed by these arguments, it’s easy to just keep going down the rabbit hole, finding more dots to connect,” he says. “Once you have such a skewed view of the world, you can be convinced of other stuff.”



The tone of his podcast is disconcertingly upbeat, chatty and jokey with other ex-truthers who join as guests. “If I’m laughing at conspiracy theorists, it’s because I’m laughing at myself,” he says. “It is funny – that you’re adults who believe in Santa Claus or something equally ridiculous.”



It feels peculiar to be jolly about something that soaked up his life for so many years so devastatingly – to the exclusion of forging a career or starting a family. It also seems a glib response to an environment that has a powerful streak of antisemitism and white supremacy running through it. Lee says he only fully understood the antisemitism when he stepped away.

What made him vulnerable? Partly, he blames his education. “I wasn’t taught how to assess information or how to do research,” he says. “I don’t think I lacked intelligence but I was very naive about politics and how the world actually works.” These are all very obtuse arguments. There’s nothing that can be verified or rejected as fact or fiction.
 
part 3:

He had a disrupted education: first, at a US high school on the Frankfurt military base where he spent much of his childhood with his English mother and American stepfather, who was serving in the US air force; later, at a college in England, from which he was expelled (for smoking weed) and started playing in a band. He spent hours on music production on his computer and developed sophisticated internet skills, at a time when most people were barely online. This gave him early access to sites run by conspiracy theorists such as David Icke; soon he was spending nine hours at a stretch consuming truther content online.



His friends, family and fellow band members were bored by his obsessions and he gradually withdrew to focus on online friendships with people who were also ready to believe that the Illuminati and Freemasons had infiltrated global governments.

When the 7/7 attacks took place in London in 2005, killing 52 people, Lee was online, searching with fellow truthers for evidence that the terror attack was orchestrated by the UK government. They examined footage of the attackers going to the train station in Luton and were made suspicious by the way railings appeared to slice through the leg of one of the attackers; they decided the image had been Photoshopped before being released by the police. Now he acknowledges that the glitches might simply have been the result of shaky CCTV technology rather than the work of cultist masterminds. OK, finally a tiny bit of concrete information, but for me at least on some obscure event, perhaps not so obscure to the English.

He spent months building an alternative explanation for the attacks and disseminating his theories through his blog. “I’m ashamed of putting so many lies out there. I didn’t mean to lie, I just had the wrong picture.” He maintains this came from a good place. “I wanted to find the real people who had organised the attacks; I wanted justice for the victims. But I was wrong and it took away guilt from the real perpetrators, people who did something atrocious.”

Naomi Klein examines the mushrooming of conspiracism in her new book Doppelganger, noting that people often come under its sway because they are searching for a practical solution to a sense of unfairness. Conspiracists have a “fantasy of justice”, hoping that the evil-doing elites can be arrested and stopped. “Conspiracy theorists get the facts wrong but often get the feelings right,” she writes. “The feeling that every human misery is someone else’s profit … the feeling that important truths are being hidden.” She quotes digital journalism scholar Marcus Gilroy-Ware’s conclusion that: “Conspiracy theories are a misfiring of a healthy and justifiable political instinct: suspicion.”



Lee’s appetite for conspiracies started to wane when the “alt-right” US broadcaster Alex Jones began claiming that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting was a hoax, that no one died and the parents of the 20 children who died were “crisis actors” – hired to play disaster victims. I don’t consider Jones a reliable source and don’t trust anything he says, so I don’t bother following him, though occasionally I used to run across his stuff in my feeds. Not so much for the last number of years as he has been banned from YouTube. However, I did watch a good bit of the documentary hit piece on Jones. IMO he can’t be trusted because he puts a sensationalized spin on everything he touches. His take on Sandy Hook was complete garbage and I never gave it a second thought. However the one thing that was conspicuously absent in the documentary on Jones was his coverage of Waco. He was an unknown local public access show host in Texas before Waco. Waco was his big break and everything he said about it turned out to be pretty much right on. So he wasn’t given a fair shake in that documentary, which is not a good look. Lee found this implausible and felt irritated by other wild theories swirling around the internet – that Justin Bieber and Eminem were Illuminati clones, that a paedophile ring, involving people at the highest level of the Democratic party, was operating out of a Washington pizza restaurant. “I looked at Pizzagate and thought, ‘Well that’s just stupid.’” (He spends six podcast episodes debunking the Pizzagate conspiracy; this seems a pithier summary.)



When Covid triggered a popularity surge for conspiracy theorists, Lee was already done with it, and simply noted that if there really was a global movement working to establish a new world order through the pandemic, they were going about it in a strikingly ill-coordinated and muddled manner. “The governments weren’t acting in lockstep with each other. There was no well-oiled machine; it was disorganised. No one was in charge.” That’s complete Bullshit.. the WHO and national health agencies were in change and they did act pretty much in lockstep with lockdowns and vaccine policies and lies about effectiveness etc. Covid ushered in massive suspensions in civil rights and greatly expanded governmental powers, while it crushed the middle class and made a good number of people extremely wealthy.



He understands why other people were attracted to the idea: “Just like 9/11 brought people into conspiracies, Covid was another moment when people were scared and wanted answers, and they found conspiracy influencers saying: ‘Don’t worry about it, it’s not real.’ What about all the people that were saying it was real and made in a lab, funded by Fauci etc. That’s what I was saying.. There was almost no one that said it wasn’t real.. so that again is complete BS.



Lee was an early adopter of ideas that have surged in popularity as people spend more time online, and as trust in the mainstream media falters with the suggestion (much propagated by the former US president Donald Trump) that they are spreaders of fake news. The emergence of QAnon (which propagates the baseless theory that Trump was battling a cabal of sex-trafficking satanists, some of whom were Democrats) has attracted more people to this world. Lee’s interests preceded the arrival of powerful opinion-shaping algorithms pushing people into closed loops of fact-free narratives. Since leaving the fold he has developed a sharp clarity about the self-interested financial motivations of conspiracists who work to monetise their online presence with increasingly wild, clickbaity dispatches. I don’t know too many people that are getting rich from spreading conspiracy theories, but they may exist. You can also look at people like Mercola that were demonetized for speaking the truth about Covid. He was making big $$ from his information about holistic health and took a big hit as a result of Covid.
 
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