Some people allege that the politicians, bureaucrats and corporate elite that make up the ruling class are conspiring to enrich themselves, gain more power, and transform society into a totalitarian dystopia. From assassinations to false flags, cognitive warfare to the rigging of elections, engineered pandemics to manufactured economic and social crises, there is little they won’t do to achieve their nefarious ends. But to make such assertions is to be branded a conspiracy theorist. And conspiracy theorists are mentally unhinged, paranoid, and deluded, and we should ignore their claims as we would the ravings of a mad man – or so we are conditioned to believe. In this video, relying on the book Conspiracy Theory in America by Lance deHaven-Smith, we explore why a blanket rejection of conspiracy theories is naïve and why our freedom is contingent on more of us being open minded to the possibility that conspiracies among the ruling class are a prime factor contributing to the downfall of the West.
Are you a SCAD theorist? What? You don’t know about the SCAD construct? Well then you’d better join me for today’s deep dive on a modern classic of conspiracy realism, Conspiracy Theory in Americaby Lance deHaven-Smith.
“Conspiracy theory” is just a term the CIA weaponised for their propagandist to help them shut down any debate—about who shot JFK—by sticking the dismissive “conspiracy theorist” label on anyone who dared to question the US government’s official account. It really doesn’t mean anything more than that. Alleged “conspiracy theorists” are just people who question government narratives.
We need to normalize the words “CONSPIRACY THEORY”. It’s a tool used to dismiss conjecture, claims, charges, and admissions of conspiracies. There is no doubt that conspiracies happen. The trick is to try to determine whether individuals worked together to conspire to mislead the public on important issues.