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Conspiracy theory

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A person promoting the "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory.

A conspiracy theory is an attempted rationalization of an event or pattern of events through which a small yet powerful group of people coordinate to propagate a lie or act maliciously, often for the purpose of keeping their power. Conspiracy theories often reject commonly held knowledge or empirical data and rely on a number of cognitive biases to be believed in. Technically, whether or not something is a "conspiracy theory" has little bearing on whether or not it is true, as actual conspiracies can and do happen; however, the methodology of conspiracy theories is still flawed by their nature.[1]

Conspiracy theory often attempts to give the government/state an independent character, divorced from class struggle. As noted by Lenin in his seminal work, The State and Revolution, governments do not have independent character or agency. They are byproducts of the conflict in-between and inability to harmonize the differences of the classes.

Fascists and reactionaries are the biggest believers in conspiracy theories (of any kind) which is a way of blaming the difficulties of capitalism on other causes, usually minority groups. In the past, conspiracy theories have been used to justify large atrocities, such as genocide.[2] Indeed, there is a link between conspiracy theories and fascist rhetoric, best exemplified by the "reptilians" conspiracy theory.

History[edit | edit source]

The term "conspiracy theory" has been in use since the 1860s but was largely revived after Statesian President John F. Kennedy's assasination.[3] Conspiracies have existed throughout history, e.g. when the tobacco industry conspired to downplay or even cover the effects of their products on health.[4] The difference between a conspiracy and a conspiracy theory is that the latter requires someone to spread the rumor. As such, a conspiracy theory may very well turn out to be true eventually.

List of false conspiracy theories[edit | edit source]

Flat Earth[edit | edit source]

Flat earth is the disproved idea that the Earth is in the shape of a flat disk with a ring of ice on its exterior. Furthermore, they believe that gravity is merely caused by the earth constantly accelerating upwards. Those who believe in this idea often also believe other conspiracy theories such as the idea of the Moon landing hoax due to the fact that should the Earth be flat, the pictures of the Earth from the Moon would have to have been falsified.[citation needed]

Fluoridation[edit | edit source]

Fluoridation refers to the conspiracy theory that the addition of fluoride to the public water supply is intended for mind control purposes or for the benefit of pharmaceutical companies as fluoride makes people sick.[citation needed] The reason some cities add fluoride to their water is because of its health benefits on teeth,[5] though some countries have stopped adding fluoride as the delivery mechanism (ingestion in the body) may not provide the desired effects as revealed by later studies.[6]

Great Replacement[edit | edit source]

See main article: Great Replacement

The Great Replacement is a conspiracy theory claiming that immigrants from Latin America and Africa will replace white people as the majority of the population in the imperial core. Fox News host Tucker Carlson has promoted this conspiracy theory.[7]

New World Order[edit | edit source]

The New World Order is an umbrella term for many conspiracy theories which surround a 'secret powerful government'. This correlates with the term 'deep state'. A popular conspiracy theory is the Illuminati, which was the name of a real secret society in the 18th century, but which conspiracy theorists wrongly claim still exists.[8]

QAnon[edit | edit source]

QAnon is a 4chan-based conspiracy theory claiming that Statesian billionaire Donald Trump is saving the USA from a cabal of Satanic pedophiles led by the Democratic Party.[9]

Russiagate[edit | edit source]

See main article: Russiagate

Russiagate is a conspiracy theory that the Russian Federation was responsible for Trump's victory over Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election when it was actually caused by the slavery-based electoral college.[10]

Reptilians[edit | edit source]

Antisemite and fascist David Icke in his book Children of the Matrix was the first to promote the theory that some of the world's leaders and celebrities are actually shape-shifting reptilians, or lizard people, taking the shape of humans so as to embed themselves in society and direct it from these positions of power. His theory has parallels with older antisemitic conspiracy theories, such as that Jewish people control banks, entertainment etc. forming a shadowy cabal, or that they were depicted in propaganda posters as having lizard-like features (likely itself originating from the original sin in the Bible).

Staged moon landing[edit | edit source]

List of conspiracy theories that may be true[edit | edit source]

JFK assassination[edit | edit source]

See main article: John F. Kennedy#Assassination

According to the documentary JFK: Destiny Betrayed, the CIA assassinated John F. Kennedy as part of a coup to reassert the rule of the imperialist ruling class.[11]

9/11[edit | edit source]

See main article: September 11 attacks#Alleged U.S. government involvement

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Harambam, J., & Aupers, S. (2021). From the unbelievable to the undeniable: Epistemological pluralism, or how conspiracy theorists legitimate their extraordinary truth claims.. [PDF] doi: 10.1177/1367549419886045 [HUB]
  2. Douglas, Karen M.; Uscinski, Joseph E.; Sutton, Robbie M.; Cichocka, Aleksandra; Nefes, Turkay; Ang, Chee Siang; Deravi, Farzin (2019). Understanding Conspiracy Theories. [PDF] ISBN 0162-895X doi: 10.1111/pops.12568 [HUB]
  3. GRAPH MASSARA (2023-01-06). "‘Conspiracy theory’ coined long before JFK assassination" Associated Press.
  4. Neil Francey, Simon Chapman (2000-08-05). "“Operation Berkshire”: the international tobacco companies' conspiracy" National Library of Medicine.
  5. "Water Fluoridation and Cancer Risk". American Cancer Society.
  6. Maitreyee P. Unde, Raju Umaji Patil, Persis P. Dastoor (2018-12-22). "The Untold Story of Fluoridation: Revisiting the Changing Perspectives" National Library of Medicine.
  7. Brian Becker (2022-05-20). "Buffalo Massacre Aftermath: Mainstream Media Still Validating Racist 'Replacement Theory'" BreakThrough News. Archived from the original on 2022-09-30. Retrieved 2022-11-23.
  8. Fred Kelly (2024-09-26). "What is the Illuminati conspiracy theory?" The Week. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  9. Raul Diego (2020-10-06). "From British Israelism to the Miami Model: What’s Behind QAnon’s 2020 Resurgence?" MintPress News. Archived from the original on 2021-10-16. Retrieved 2022-08-08.
  10. Brian Becker (2018-04-07). "Past a point of no return: “Russiagate” and the reorientation of U.S. imperialism" Liberation News. Archived from the original on 2022-05-18. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
  11. John Potash (2022-07-26). "New Four-Part Documentary “JFK: Destiny Betrayed” Leaves No Doubt That JFK Was Assassinated as Part of CIA Coup" CovertAction Magazine. Archived from the original on 2023-06-23.