Conspiracy theories real


13 of the best conspiracy theories

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(Image credit: NASA)

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.

Conspiracies are sometimes real. The Watergate break-in is a good example of a political conspiracy that actually happened. But thanks to the social-media algorithms that push users toward ever-more-emotional, conspiratorial content, it's probably never been easier for false conspiracy theories to spread. 

The top conspiracy theories are often very difficult to dislodge: Some may contain grains of truth or feed an emotional need for believers. And hardcore believers are adept at rationalizing away evidence that contradicts their beliefs. Eyewitnesses who dispute the conclusions of even the biggest conspiracy theories are mistaken, according to believers — or part of the conspiracy.

The truth, however, is out there … 

The 9/11 Conspiracies

An aerial view of the NYC Custom house and surrounding area after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. (Image credit: HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The evidence is overwhelming that the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, were indeed the result of a conspiracy: a conspiracy of Osama bin Laden and a crew of mostly Saudi hijackers. 

This is too simple for some, though. Conspiracy theorists have a variety of much more complex explanations for what happened at the World Trade Center and Pentagon that day, often involving insider knowledge by President George Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and top Bush advisors. 

Some famous conspiracy theories rely on anti-Semetic tropes, such as the attacks being orchestrated by Israel. Many claim that because "jet fuel can't melt steel beams," the Twin Towers must have been brought down by controlled demolition from bombs planted before the planes hit. (A 2006 NOVA documentary debunked these claims. It is, in fact, quite possible for the columns holding up skyscrapers to fail catastrophically when exposed to fires burning on multiple floors.) 

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? 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. 

Princess Diana's murder

(Image credit: Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

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, 2008, the coroner's jury concluded that Diana and Al-Fayed were unlawfully killed due to negligence by their drunken chauffeur and pursuing paparazzi, The New York Times reported .

Subliminal advertising

(Image credit: Germi_p via Getty Images)

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 of this conspiracy theory 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. 

Moon landing hoax

Here, a real image of Buzz Aldrin saluting the U.S. flag on the surface of the moon. (Image credit: NASA)

NASA landed astronauts on the moon in 1969. By the 1970s, a bizarre conspiracy emerged — that the moon landing never happened. 

The conspiracy was described in a 1976 self-published book, "We Never Went to the Moon: America's Thirty Billion Dollar Swindle," and a 1978 movie, "Capricorn One. " Even as late as 2001, there was a Fox documentary, "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?" that gave air time to the claims that the whole Apollo moon-landing program was faked. 

There are plenty of debunkings of the various moon hoax claims , and then there's the issue of the hundreds of pounds of moon rocks that have been studied around the world and verified as being of extraterrestrial origin. How did NASA get the rocks if not during a moon landing? Why would scientists from around the globe willingly participate in the American space agency's hoax? 

Many astronauts have been offended by the implication that they faked their accomplishments. In 2002, when conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel confronted Buzz Aldrin and called him a "coward and a liar" for faking the moon landings, the then 72-year-old punched Sibrel in the jaw.

Paul McCartney's death

Paul McCartney, who is very much alive, performs onstage during the 36th Annual Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony on Oct. 30, 2021 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Paul McCartney is not dead. As of mid-2022, he was still touring, in fact, and he probably still would be if the coronavirus pandemic hadn't canceled his gigs. He gives interviews, he has a website, he occasionally appears in the tabloids. 

Pretty good for a guy that some conspiracy theorists think died in 1966. 

The "Paul is dead" conspiracy goes something like this: On Nov. 9, 1966, Paul McCartney got into an argument with the other Beatles, stormed out of the studio and was promptly decapitated in a car accident. To cover the whole thing up, the band hired a look-alike (and sound-alike). 

After going through all this trouble, though, the band then took great pains to drop clues in their album covers and lyrics to hint to the public that something was amiss. 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 (and many, many public appearances by McCartney), fans couldn't just let it be, and came together to look for more clues.

John F. Kennedy's assassination

President John Kennedy rides in a motorcade from the Dallas airport into the city with his wife Jacqueline and Texas Governor John Connally. (Image credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

John F. Kennedy was shot in 1963 in a Dallas motorcade. But did Lee Harvey Oswald act alone? Or was there a second gunman on the grassy knoll? 

These questions are the gateway to a vast arena of conspiracy theories that have spawned endless speculation and hundreds of books, articles and films. It didn't help that Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered in the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters while surrounded by police officers only two days after the assassination — and by a guy with ties to the Mob. The whole thing stunk, people figured.  

Plenty of shadowy culprits have been suggested as the masterminds of the Kennedy assassination: Fidel Castro's government, or maybe anti-Castro activists, or organized crime, or the CIA, or Vice President Lyndon Johnson, or … Well, the thing about presidents is, it turns out, they have a lot of enemies. The Warren Commission report, produced by the official investigation into Kennedy's death, found no evidence of overarching conspiracies, though plenty of theories still flourish. 

Roswell crash & cover-up

The Roswell Daily Record from July 9, 1947, details the Roswell UFO incident. (Image credit: Roswell Daily Record)

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

(Image credit: Chronicle/Alamy)

"The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion" is a hoaxed antisemitic 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 antisemitic 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, Adolf 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.

The Satanic panic

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

For years during the 1980s and 1990s, America became convinced that an underground network of Satanists was working together to kidnap, torture and abuse children. None of it was real, but the conspiracy theories destroyed lives and livelihoods. 

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. It was the most-viewed documentary in television history. "There are over one million Satanists in this country," Rivera said, adding that "The odds are, [they] are in your town." 

The panic grew out of the idea that memories of abuse were often repressed and could be recovered with the help of hypnosis and a therapist. This idea was popularized in the 1980 book "Michelle Remembers," co-written by a Canadian psychiatrist and the patient he eventually married (ethics red flag), in which the eponymous Michelle recovers memories of supposed ritual Satanic abuse conducted by her mother. 

In 1983, the panic exploded with the McMartin preschool trial, in which a California parent accused daycare owners of sexually abusing her son. Police then sent a letter to parents warning that their children may have been abused, urging the parents to ask what turned out to be leading questions to a bunch of suggestible preschoolers. Further questioning by authorities continued in this vein, yielding alleged eyewitness accounts by children of networks of secret tunnels and witches flying through the air.  

After seven years, the daycare owners were eventually acquitted or had the charges dismissed. One was jailed for five years while awaiting trials and retrials. In the meantime, similar accusations spread through daycares around the country. Most were spurred on by now-discredited methods of questioning small children, methods that often led to children making sensational accusations because they wanted to please the authority figures questioning them. 

In a 1992 report on ritual crime, FBI agent Kenneth Lanning concluded that the rampant rumors around ritual Satanism 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."

Chemtrails

(Image credit: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

As airplanes travel, they leave behind them long water condensation trails called contrails. These cloud-like tracks dissipate quickly. 

But to some conspiracy theorists, these condensation trails are much more nefarious. The "Chemtrails" conspiracy theory holds that condensation trails are full of other chemicals that scientists and governments are seeding into the atmosphere. Why? Pick your reason. It might be biological warfare or population control or geoengineering or an attempt to manipulate the weather. 

Researchers who study things like clouds' impact on global temperatures are often harassed by Chemtrails believers, who think they're part of a large-scale conspiracy to secretly spray unknown chemicals into the atmosphere, according to Harvard University's David Keith . A 2016 study even debunked chemtrails scientifically, finding no evidence of unusual contrails or unexplained contamination in the environment. But true believers aren't swayed, as The Guardian reported in 2017.

Barack Obama birtherism

Phil Wolf, owner of a used car dealership, paid $2,500 to have this “birther” billboard painted, shown here on Nov. 21, 2009 in Wheat Ridge, Colorado. (Image credit: John Moore/Getty Images)

Some conspiracies, like chemtrails, percolate in the background of certain communities, never really penetrating the larger public. Others have big impacts. The Barack Obama birtherism conspiracy is one of the latter. 

Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States, was born in 1961 in Honolulu, Hawaii. But as soon as Obama began his campaign for president in 2008, "birthers" began to circulate the conspiracy theory that Obama had actually been born in Kenya, the country of his father. They argued that this meant Obama was not "a natural-born citizen of the U.S." — even though his mother was an American citizen — and thus he could not be president.

Nevermind that there were announcements of Obama's birth in the Honolulu newspaper, or that friends of Obama's mother remembered the day she went into labor. To combat the conspiracies, Obama not only had to release a copy of his birth certificate in 2008, he had to follow up with a release of the original "long form" document in 2011, contrary to the hospital's usual policy of issuing computer copies of birth certificates as acceptable identification.  

The 2011 release reduced the number of Americans who believed in birtherism, according to Gallup polling . But many conservative political activists and pundits raised their profiles by advocating for birtherism. Among them? Donald Trump, who was at the time the soon-to-be-president. 

COVID and 5G

Anti-lockdown conspiracy theorists and coronavirus deniers protest in Trafalgar Square in London against the government and mainstream media who, they say, are behind disinformation and untruths about the COVID-19 pandemic, on Aug. 29, 2020. (Image credit: Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)

Probably no event since 9/11 has spawned more conspiratorial thinking than the COVID-19 pandemic. There are conspiracies about the origin of the virus as well as basically every government's reactions. Many people even believe doctors are lying about COVID-related deaths, blaming the virus for deaths with other causes. A distrust of "Big Pharma," fomented for years by "alternative medicine" advocates like Kevin Trudeau (bestselling author of "Natural Cures They Don't Want You To Know About" — a textbook conspiratorial title if there ever was one), have also fed into conspiracies about medical treatment and vaccination. 

One of the odder conspiracies mixes long-standing fears of 5G wireless technology with fears about the virus. According to the COVID 5G conspiracy, electromagnetic frequencies from cell phone towers undermine the immune system, making people sick with COVID, researchers reported in 2020 in the journal Media International Australia . Another conspiracy theory claims that the COVID-19 vaccines contain tracking chips that connect to 5G networks so that the government, or possibly billionaire and vaccine philanthropist Bill Gates, can surveille everyone's movements. 

As CNBC points out, 5G chips are too large to fit through a vaccine syringe, and even the smallest RFID chips that could fit require a power source that couldn't make the squeeze.  

Birds aren't real

(Image credit: temizyurek/Getty Images)

When is a conspiracy not a conspiracy? When it's an elaborate piece of performance art. 

Or… does that make it even more of a conspiracy theory? 

The Birds Aren't Real conspiracy is a movement developed by Peter McIndoe, 23, who started spreading the idea in 2017. Until a December 2021 interview in the New York Times, McIndoe stayed in-character as a true believer, insisting in media interviews and online that birds aren't real, but rather they are surveillance drones made by the U.S. government. Birds Aren't Real has a staff; it has organized real-life protests; it bought real-life billboards; and it emblazoned vans with their claim. The goal, says McIndoe, is to parody the misinformation that Gen Z finds itself stewing in.

"Birds Aren't Real is not a shallow satire of conspiracies from the outside. It is from the deep inside," he told The New York Times. "A lot of people in our generation feel the lunacy in all this, and Birds Aren't Real has been a way for people to process that."

The experiment revealed that conspiracies sometimes grow by credulity: Local media sometimes reported on Birds Aren't Real as if it was something young people really believed rather than an elaborate joke. Birds Aren't Real organizers hope the joke will become a force for good by exposing all the ways misinformation thrives. 

"Yes, we have been intentionally spreading misinformation for the past four years, but it's with a purpose," McIndoe said. "It's about holding up a mirror to America in the internet age."

The Earth is flat

Flat Earth theories hold that our home planet is a pancake. (Image credit: Alamy)

Flat-Earth conspiracy theories first arose in the 1950s and have been given new life in the Internet age. They’re bizarre, almost quaint. After all, even ancient people knew the Earth was round. The Greeks even figured out the planet’s circumference in the 3rd century. Since then, astronauts have launched into space and seen the “Blue Marble” with their own eyes.

But Flat Earth believers don’t see beyond their own horizon: The line between Earth and sky looks pretty flat, they figure, and all the rest of the evidence gets tossed out the window. On YouTube and message boards, Flat-Earthers spend their time inventing weird physics to try to explain how things like gravity and lunar eclipses could possibly work if Earth were a flat disk. Many are motivated by religious belief or the desire to see the universe as a more caring, human-centered place, Michael Wood, a lecturer in psychology at the University in Winchester in England, told Live Science in 2018.

COVID treatments cause COVID deaths

Alternative-health conspiracy theorists push mistrust in evidence-based medicine. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

The “COVID vaccines contain 5G chips” conspiracy theory is easy to mock, but a less-absurd-sounding conspiracy around COVID is very likely costing lives: Some people believe that the very drugs that can be used to treat COVID-19 are actually killing patients.

This has led to stories about people infected with the disease who have refused effective drugs, like the antiviral remdesivir, because they’ve put their trust in online “alternative health” sources who are often selling their own unproven (or in many cases, disproven) treatments. One of these viral alt-health podcasters, a former chiropractor named Bryan Ardis, has also been spreading the bizarre notion that COVID-19 isn’t even caused by a virus, but by snake venom injected into “certain people” by the Catholic Church and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No word on how the millions of people infected with COVID-19 at this point have failed to notice the Pope skulking around their bedroom with a syringe full of snake venom, but never mind. Ardis, of course, sells his own line of supplements meant to combat this imaginary venom.

Reptilians run the U.S. government

(Image credit: Dwi Yulianto/EyeEm via Getty Images)

The idea that the U.S. government (or perhaps the entire world government) is run by reptilian humanoids is … out there, to say the least. And yet, people holding this belief have done real damage. For example, a man who detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, on Christmas Day 2020 had written a friend about his belief that lizard people walked the planet, disguised as humans. Warner killed himself, damaged 41 buildings, and injured three in the bombing.

The idea of half-lizard, half-human beings goes way back, with one academic tracing it to a pulp fiction magazine story from 1929. British conspiracy theorist David Icke has been a key spreader of the “reptilian shapeshifters control the world” conspiracy, which sometimes overlaps with New World Order conspiracy theories that suggest that an elite cabal plan to institute authoritarian global government. These conspiracies often overlap with anti-Semitism, assigning this supposed cabal Jewish roots.

The reptilian conspiracy theory got a small signal-boost with the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022. According to Politifact, Facebook flagged and removed multiple posts after the queen’s death calling the monarch a reptile and linking to strange videos claiming the entire royal family is reptilian.  

Benjamin Radford is the Bad Science columnist for Live Science. He covers pseudoscience, psychology, urban legends and the science behind "unexplained" or mysterious phenomenon. Ben has a master's degree in education and a bachelor's degree in psychology. He is deputy editor of Skeptical Inquirer science magazine and has written, edited or contributed to more than 20 books, including "Scientific Paranormal Investigation: How to Solve Unexplained Mysteries," "Tracking the Chupacabra: The Vampire Beast in Fact, Fiction, and Folklore" and “Investigating Ghosts: The Scientific Search for Spirits,” out in fall 2017. His website is www.BenjaminRadford.com.

13 of the best conspiracy theories

(Image credit: NASA)

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.

Conspiracies are sometimes real. The Watergate break-in is a good example of a political conspiracy that actually happened. But thanks to the social-media algorithms that push users toward ever-more-emotional, conspiratorial content, it's probably never been easier for false conspiracy theories to spread. 

The top conspiracy theories are often very difficult to dislodge: Some may contain grains of truth or feed an emotional need for believers. And hardcore believers are adept at rationalizing away evidence that contradicts their beliefs. Eyewitnesses who dispute the conclusions of even the biggest conspiracy theories are mistaken, according to believers — or part of the conspiracy.

The truth, however, is out there … 

The 9/11 Conspiracies

An aerial view of the NYC Custom house and surrounding area after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. (Image credit: HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The evidence is overwhelming that the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, were indeed the result of a conspiracy: a conspiracy of Osama bin Laden and a crew of mostly Saudi hijackers. 

This is too simple for some, though. Conspiracy theorists have a variety of much more complex explanations for what happened at the World Trade Center and Pentagon that day, often involving insider knowledge by President George Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and top Bush advisors. 

Some famous conspiracy theories rely on anti-Semetic tropes, such as the attacks being orchestrated by Israel. Many claim that because "jet fuel can't melt steel beams," the Twin Towers must have been brought down by controlled demolition from bombs planted before the planes hit. (A 2006 NOVA documentary debunked these claims. It is, in fact, quite possible for the columns holding up skyscrapers to fail catastrophically when exposed to fires burning on multiple floors.) 

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? 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. 

Princess Diana's murder

(Image credit: Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

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, 2008, the coroner's jury concluded that Diana and Al-Fayed were unlawfully killed due to negligence by their drunken chauffeur and pursuing paparazzi, The New York Times reported .

Subliminal advertising

(Image credit: Germi_p via Getty Images)

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 of this conspiracy theory 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.  

Moon landing hoax

Here, a real image of Buzz Aldrin saluting the U.S. flag on the surface of the moon. (Image credit: NASA)

NASA landed astronauts on the moon in 1969. By the 1970s, a bizarre conspiracy emerged — that the moon landing never happened. 

The conspiracy was described in a 1976 self-published book, "We Never Went to the Moon: America's Thirty Billion Dollar Swindle," and a 1978 movie, "Capricorn One." Even as late as 2001, there was a Fox documentary, "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?" that gave air time to the claims that the whole Apollo moon-landing program was faked. 

There are plenty of debunkings of the various moon hoax claims , and then there's the issue of the hundreds of pounds of moon rocks that have been studied around the world and verified as being of extraterrestrial origin. How did NASA get the rocks if not during a moon landing? Why would scientists from around the globe willingly participate in the American space agency's hoax? 

Many astronauts have been offended by the implication that they faked their accomplishments. In 2002, when conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel confronted Buzz Aldrin and called him a "coward and a liar" for faking the moon landings, the then 72-year-old punched Sibrel in the jaw.

Paul McCartney's death

Paul McCartney, who is very much alive, performs onstage during the 36th Annual Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony on Oct. 30, 2021 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Image credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Paul McCartney is not dead. As of mid-2022, he was still touring, in fact, and he probably still would be if the coronavirus pandemic hadn't canceled his gigs. He gives interviews, he has a website, he occasionally appears in the tabloids. 

Pretty good for a guy that some conspiracy theorists think died in 1966. 

The "Paul is dead" conspiracy goes something like this: On Nov. 9, 1966, Paul McCartney got into an argument with the other Beatles, stormed out of the studio and was promptly decapitated in a car accident. To cover the whole thing up, the band hired a look-alike (and sound-alike). 

After going through all this trouble, though, the band then took great pains to drop clues in their album covers and lyrics to hint to the public that something was amiss. 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 (and many, many public appearances by McCartney), fans couldn't just let it be, and came together to look for more clues.

John F. Kennedy's assassination

President John Kennedy rides in a motorcade from the Dallas airport into the city with his wife Jacqueline and Texas Governor John Connally. (Image credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

John F. Kennedy was shot in 1963 in a Dallas motorcade. But did Lee Harvey Oswald act alone? Or was there a second gunman on the grassy knoll? 

These questions are the gateway to a vast arena of conspiracy theories that have spawned endless speculation and hundreds of books, articles and films. It didn't help that Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered in the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters while surrounded by police officers only two days after the assassination — and by a guy with ties to the Mob. The whole thing stunk, people figured. 

Plenty of shadowy culprits have been suggested as the masterminds of the Kennedy assassination: Fidel Castro's government, or maybe anti-Castro activists, or organized crime, or the CIA, or Vice President Lyndon Johnson, or … Well, the thing about presidents is, it turns out, they have a lot of enemies. The Warren Commission report, produced by the official investigation into Kennedy's death, found no evidence of overarching conspiracies, though plenty of theories still flourish. 

Roswell crash & cover-up

The Roswell Daily Record from July 9, 1947, details the Roswell UFO incident. (Image credit: Roswell Daily Record)

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

(Image credit: Chronicle/Alamy)

"The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion" is a hoaxed antisemitic 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 antisemitic 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, Adolf 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.

The Satanic panic

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

For years during the 1980s and 1990s, America became convinced that an underground network of Satanists was working together to kidnap, torture and abuse children. None of it was real, but the conspiracy theories destroyed lives and livelihoods. 

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. It was the most-viewed documentary in television history. "There are over one million Satanists in this country," Rivera said, adding that "The odds are, [they] are in your town." 

The panic grew out of the idea that memories of abuse were often repressed and could be recovered with the help of hypnosis and a therapist. This idea was popularized in the 1980 book "Michelle Remembers," co-written by a Canadian psychiatrist and the patient he eventually married (ethics red flag), in which the eponymous Michelle recovers memories of supposed ritual Satanic abuse conducted by her mother. 

In 1983, the panic exploded with the McMartin preschool trial, in which a California parent accused daycare owners of sexually abusing her son. Police then sent a letter to parents warning that their children may have been abused, urging the parents to ask what turned out to be leading questions to a bunch of suggestible preschoolers. Further questioning by authorities continued in this vein, yielding alleged eyewitness accounts by children of networks of secret tunnels and witches flying through the air. 

After seven years, the daycare owners were eventually acquitted or had the charges dismissed. One was jailed for five years while awaiting trials and retrials. In the meantime, similar accusations spread through daycares around the country. Most were spurred on by now-discredited methods of questioning small children, methods that often led to children making sensational accusations because they wanted to please the authority figures questioning them. 

In a 1992 report on ritual crime, FBI agent Kenneth Lanning concluded that the rampant rumors around ritual Satanism 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. "

Chemtrails

(Image credit: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

As airplanes travel, they leave behind them long water condensation trails called contrails. These cloud-like tracks dissipate quickly. 

But to some conspiracy theorists, these condensation trails are much more nefarious. The "Chemtrails" conspiracy theory holds that condensation trails are full of other chemicals that scientists and governments are seeding into the atmosphere. Why? Pick your reason. It might be biological warfare or population control or geoengineering or an attempt to manipulate the weather. 

Researchers who study things like clouds' impact on global temperatures are often harassed by Chemtrails believers, who think they're part of a large-scale conspiracy to secretly spray unknown chemicals into the atmosphere, according to Harvard University's David Keith . A 2016 study even debunked chemtrails scientifically, finding no evidence of unusual contrails or unexplained contamination in the environment. But true believers aren't swayed, as The Guardian reported in 2017.

Barack Obama birtherism

Phil Wolf, owner of a used car dealership, paid $2,500 to have this “birther” billboard painted, shown here on Nov. 21, 2009 in Wheat Ridge, Colorado. (Image credit: John Moore/Getty Images)

Some conspiracies, like chemtrails, percolate in the background of certain communities, never really penetrating the larger public. Others have big impacts. The Barack Obama birtherism conspiracy is one of the latter. 

Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States, was born in 1961 in Honolulu, Hawaii. But as soon as Obama began his campaign for president in 2008, "birthers" began to circulate the conspiracy theory that Obama had actually been born in Kenya, the country of his father. They argued that this meant Obama was not "a natural-born citizen of the U.S." — even though his mother was an American citizen — and thus he could not be president.

Nevermind that there were announcements of Obama's birth in the Honolulu newspaper, or that friends of Obama's mother remembered the day she went into labor. To combat the conspiracies, Obama not only had to release a copy of his birth certificate in 2008, he had to follow up with a release of the original "long form" document in 2011, contrary to the hospital's usual policy of issuing computer copies of birth certificates as acceptable identification. 

The 2011 release reduced the number of Americans who believed in birtherism, according to Gallup polling . But many conservative political activists and pundits raised their profiles by advocating for birtherism. Among them? Donald Trump, who was at the time the soon-to-be-president. 

COVID and 5G

Anti-lockdown conspiracy theorists and coronavirus deniers protest in Trafalgar Square in London against the government and mainstream media who, they say, are behind disinformation and untruths about the COVID-19 pandemic, on Aug. 29, 2020. (Image credit: Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)

Probably no event since 9/11 has spawned more conspiratorial thinking than the COVID-19 pandemic. There are conspiracies about the origin of the virus as well as basically every government's reactions. Many people even believe doctors are lying about COVID-related deaths, blaming the virus for deaths with other causes. A distrust of "Big Pharma," fomented for years by "alternative medicine" advocates like Kevin Trudeau (bestselling author of "Natural Cures They Don't Want You To Know About" — a textbook conspiratorial title if there ever was one), have also fed into conspiracies about medical treatment and vaccination. 

One of the odder conspiracies mixes long-standing fears of 5G wireless technology with fears about the virus. According to the COVID 5G conspiracy, electromagnetic frequencies from cell phone towers undermine the immune system, making people sick with COVID, researchers reported in 2020 in the journal Media International Australia . Another conspiracy theory claims that the COVID-19 vaccines contain tracking chips that connect to 5G networks so that the government, or possibly billionaire and vaccine philanthropist Bill Gates, can surveille everyone's movements. 

As CNBC points out, 5G chips are too large to fit through a vaccine syringe, and even the smallest RFID chips that could fit require a power source that couldn't make the squeeze. 

Birds aren't real

(Image credit: temizyurek/Getty Images)

When is a conspiracy not a conspiracy? When it's an elaborate piece of performance art. 

Or… does that make it even more of a conspiracy theory? 

The Birds Aren't Real conspiracy is a movement developed by Peter McIndoe, 23, who started spreading the idea in 2017. Until a December 2021 interview in the New York Times, McIndoe stayed in-character as a true believer, insisting in media interviews and online that birds aren't real, but rather they are surveillance drones made by the U. S. government. Birds Aren't Real has a staff; it has organized real-life protests; it bought real-life billboards; and it emblazoned vans with their claim. The goal, says McIndoe, is to parody the misinformation that Gen Z finds itself stewing in.

"Birds Aren't Real is not a shallow satire of conspiracies from the outside. It is from the deep inside," he told The New York Times. "A lot of people in our generation feel the lunacy in all this, and Birds Aren't Real has been a way for people to process that."

The experiment revealed that conspiracies sometimes grow by credulity: Local media sometimes reported on Birds Aren't Real as if it was something young people really believed rather than an elaborate joke. Birds Aren't Real organizers hope the joke will become a force for good by exposing all the ways misinformation thrives. 

"Yes, we have been intentionally spreading misinformation for the past four years, but it's with a purpose," McIndoe said. "It's about holding up a mirror to America in the internet age. "

The Earth is flat

Flat Earth theories hold that our home planet is a pancake. (Image credit: Alamy)

Flat-Earth conspiracy theories first arose in the 1950s and have been given new life in the Internet age. They’re bizarre, almost quaint. After all, even ancient people knew the Earth was round. The Greeks even figured out the planet’s circumference in the 3rd century. Since then, astronauts have launched into space and seen the “Blue Marble” with their own eyes.

But Flat Earth believers don’t see beyond their own horizon: The line between Earth and sky looks pretty flat, they figure, and all the rest of the evidence gets tossed out the window. On YouTube and message boards, Flat-Earthers spend their time inventing weird physics to try to explain how things like gravity and lunar eclipses could possibly work if Earth were a flat disk. Many are motivated by religious belief or the desire to see the universe as a more caring, human-centered place, Michael Wood, a lecturer in psychology at the University in Winchester in England, told Live Science in 2018.

COVID treatments cause COVID deaths

Alternative-health conspiracy theorists push mistrust in evidence-based medicine. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

The “COVID vaccines contain 5G chips” conspiracy theory is easy to mock, but a less-absurd-sounding conspiracy around COVID is very likely costing lives: Some people believe that the very drugs that can be used to treat COVID-19 are actually killing patients.

This has led to stories about people infected with the disease who have refused effective drugs, like the antiviral remdesivir, because they’ve put their trust in online “alternative health” sources who are often selling their own unproven (or in many cases, disproven) treatments. One of these viral alt-health podcasters, a former chiropractor named Bryan Ardis, has also been spreading the bizarre notion that COVID-19 isn’t even caused by a virus, but by snake venom injected into “certain people” by the Catholic Church and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No word on how the millions of people infected with COVID-19 at this point have failed to notice the Pope skulking around their bedroom with a syringe full of snake venom, but never mind. Ardis, of course, sells his own line of supplements meant to combat this imaginary venom.

Reptilians run the U.S. government

(Image credit: Dwi Yulianto/EyeEm via Getty Images)

The idea that the U.S. government (or perhaps the entire world government) is run by reptilian humanoids is … out there, to say the least. And yet, people holding this belief have done real damage. For example, a man who detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, on Christmas Day 2020 had written a friend about his belief that lizard people walked the planet, disguised as humans. Warner killed himself, damaged 41 buildings, and injured three in the bombing.

The idea of half-lizard, half-human beings goes way back, with one academic tracing it to a pulp fiction magazine story from 1929. British conspiracy theorist David Icke has been a key spreader of the “reptilian shapeshifters control the world” conspiracy, which sometimes overlaps with New World Order conspiracy theories that suggest that an elite cabal plan to institute authoritarian global government. These conspiracies often overlap with anti-Semitism, assigning this supposed cabal Jewish roots.

The reptilian conspiracy theory got a small signal-boost with the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022. According to Politifact, Facebook flagged and removed multiple posts after the queen’s death calling the monarch a reptile and linking to strange videos claiming the entire royal family is reptilian.  

Stephanie Pappas is a contributing writer for Live Science, covering topics ranging from geoscience to archaeology to the human brain and behavior. She was previously a senior writer for Live Science but is now a freelancer based in Denver, Colorado, and regularly contributes to Scientific American and The Monitor, the monthly magazine of the American Psychological Association. Stephanie received a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of South Carolina and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz. 

“Denied everything!”: Conspiracy theorists switch from Covid-19 to climate

  • Marianne Spring
  • Disinformation Special Correspondent

will help you understand the context” .

Image copyright, Getty Images

Image caption,

"I think it's part of something bigger! - I think you're paranoid!"

A network movement that peddles conspiracy theories about the causes of the global pandemic and vaccines has recently changed focus to focus on climate change denial.

British-born Matthew is convinced that there are shadow forces behind two of the hottest topics on the world agenda and that he is not being told the truth.

"All these campaigns of intimidation and propaganda are nothing but someone's attempt to impose a certain agenda," he says. "Climate, coronavirus or whatever, they don't care."

  • Anatomy of "covid-dissidence". Why it's so easy to believe in a conspiracy amid a pandemicwalking around Europe

Briton Matthew has been living in New Zealand for the last 20 years. This country is one of the few that have set the goal of completely eradicating Covid-19 through strict quarantine measures.

Concerned about this attitude of the New Zealand government, Matthew turned to social media to find information and connect with those who think like him.

He has joined a group of users who are fighting against vaccinations and wearing masks, and at the same time supplying him with speculation about sinister worldwide conspiracies in abundance.

Image caption,

Telegram community members are calling for the distribution of anti-vaccination stickers. The inscription reads: "Your children will be next." Talking to me via video link, he hid in the depths of the garden, because he did not want his partner, who did not share his views, to hear us.

Matthew and members of his online community do not separate "covid propaganda" from "climate" and consider them part of a single conspiracy.

White Rose Network

Telegram groups protesting lockdowns and vaccinations are becoming increasingly involved in the global warming debate, using the same conspiracy theories.

Their posts go far beyond political criticism and honest argument. They are full of false information, fictional stories and pseudoscientific calculations.

According to the London-based Institute for Policy Dialogue, which analyzes disinformation trends on the Internet, anti-lockdown communities are increasingly turning to the topic of a “hyped” or even, in their opinion, “made up” climate threat. They believe that someone needs all this in order to establish their control over people.

  • 5G, vaccines and digital enslavement: new coronavirus, old conspiracy theories

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"The same rhetoric is being used to stoke fear and mobilize against climate change action as it does to anti-COVID measures," says Policy Dialogue Institute researcher Jenny King.

It's not so much about the climate, but about politics, the expert notes.

"The climate is presented in conjunction with other issues that concern a much wider audience - about freedom and power, the relationship between the citizen and the state, the loss of the traditional way of life," the expert believes.

One of the groups specializing in this, "White Rose", covered Britain, the USA, Germany, and also New Zealand with its cells, where Matthew discovered it.

"It's not run by one or two people," Matthew explains. "It's a decentralized, horizontal community. You take stickers from there, print them out, stick them on lampposts, all that stuff."

The stickers my interlocutor mentioned contain slogans like "Resist the New Normal", "Real people don't wear masks" or even "There is no pandemic".

Matthew joined the local branch of White Rose after seeing one of its stickers and now hangs them around his home in suburban Auckland.

Image caption,

One of the widespread opinions is that behind everything unpleasant in the world there are anonymous powerful forces. The inscription on the sticker: "My choice"

Matthew admits that some of the theories spread on the Internet are not supported by facts and do not look very plausible, but stands his ground on the main thing: there is a "coincidence of interests of governments and large corporations", which, in his opinion, are under the guise of fighting a pandemic and climate change carry out their line.

All this greatly influenced his life. Matthew said he was recently upset that his nine-year-old daughter gave a climate presentation at school.

  • A confluence of conspiracy theories: QAnon and Covid-19 denial sweep across Europe

He sometimes regrets being dragged into the world of conspiracy theories.

"For the last three or four months I have been experiencing constant anxiety, every day I wake up with the thought: where is the world heading? Sometimes I wish it didn't happen. "

'She's gone crazy!'

Christine sees things from a different angle. She works as a nurse in Belfast and treats Covid-19 patients..

Her friend believed in conspiracy theories around the pandemic and vaccines and decided that Kristin was also part of the conspiracy.

Like Matthew, she joined the local White Rose cell. The BBC has reached out to the Telegram channel for comment.

"It's crazy, it's scary," Christine told me on the way to the night shift at the hospital.

Then her friend became interested in conspiracy theories around the climate, regularly posting relevant posts on Instagram. It ended with the two women breaking off relations with each other.

Image credit: Facebook

Image caption:

An online post by anti-vaccination groups says the world's elite want new taxes to fight rising sea levels, while buying private islands and sea level homes

"She now believes that there is no climate change, and that it was invented to reduce the population of the Earth and destroy humanism," Christine shakes her head ruefully.

New Front of Conspiracy

As vaccination begins to take effect and a number of countries, especially rich ones, are slowly returning to normal life step by step, analysts are noticing signs of a switch from covid to climate on the Internet.

  • Coronavirus and conspiracy theory. What does Bill Gates and the Veterinary Institute have to do with it? This means that in the future, some severe restrictions will allegedly be imposed on humanity in the name of the climate. Needless to say, such an assumption is completely unfounded.

    Image copyright, Instagram

    Image caption,

    An Instagram post by the Covid-19 Information Center for Vaccine Resources says: "To increase their communist power, they want to keep the world in lockdown to 'clean up the planet'

    The term has become particularly widespread on YouTube, with climate scientists saying that lockdowns due to the pandemic had little effect on greenhouse gas emissions, and such a strategy is not seriously considered. with the fantasies generated by them creates fertile ground for new conspiracy theories.Some people refuse to see reality as it is, and attribute all bad news to the malicious actions and conspiracies of certain powerful individuals.

    5 Strange Conspiracy Theories People Still Believe

    July 9Education

    It's time to find out the whole truth about Kutuzov's nuclear weapons, Lenin's death and the US bird-like drones.

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    1. Birds are drones created by the US government to monitor citizens

    Drones on charge. Image: Joe Lavigne / Unsplash

    Can you hear someone chirping outside the window? Do you think it's just a bird, an innocent creature? Just they are want you to think so. It's actually a high-tech drone designed by the CIA to spy on and eavesdrop on you. So that you don't think of anything.

    In 2017, an American prankster, Peter McIndo, for fun, created the so-called "Fake Birds" movement, which went viral. Its members claim that between 1959 and 1971, the US federal government destroyed all birds in America and replaced them with flying robots - all for the sake of national security and surveillance of unwanted people.

    By the way, when President Kennedy found out about this, he demanded that the program be curtailed because it violates human rights, and he was shot out of harm's way.

    Why do birds sit on wires and don't get electrocuted? These are drones - and that's how they recharge. See how it's all stacked up?

    Despite the fact that Makindo from the very beginning positioned the movement as a joke, not only trolls, but also real conspiracy theorists joined him. And strange people around the world began to believe that birds in the US and other countries are spy robots.

    2. The earth is hollow from the inside. And there's life out there

    A cutaway drawing of the planet Earth showing the "inner world" of Atwatabar from William R. Bradshaw's science fiction novel Goddess Atwatabara. Image: Wikimedia Commons

    The earth, as all sensible people know, is flat. But there is a theory according to which it is not only spherical, but also hollow.

    That is, inside the planet there is a huge void, in which there are their continents, seas and oceans. All this splendor is illuminated by the hot core of the hollow Earth, which, obviously, is nothing more than a very small star.

    The passages to the underworld can allegedly be found in those places where the earth's crust should be thinnest - at the North and South Poles.

    You can find anything in this world - from the mammoths and dinosaurs preserved there to the bases of the Nazis, Freemasons and aliens from Nibiru. The idea of ​​a hollow planet, which the scientific community considered quite seriously for some time, became the basis for the novels Journey to the Center of the Earth by Verne, Plutonia by Obruchev, and many other fantastic works.

    True, geologists soon came to the conclusion that the Earth cannot be hollow: studies show that it is filled with semi-liquid rock in the mantle region, on top of which the earth's crust is located. And the gravity of such a planet would be completely different. But, after all, what can these scientists know?

    3. Kutuzov used nuclear weapons against Napoleon

    Vila Franca Island. Nothing special, just after Russia Kutuzov also bombed Portugal. Image: Luis Eusebio / Unsplash

    For several years now, a copy-paste has been circulating on the Internet with the following content: “Two officers were located in one of the Kremlin buildings, from where they had a view of the northern and eastern parts of the city. Around midnight, they were awakened by an extraordinary light, and they saw that the flames had engulfed the palaces ... The information brought by the officers who had gathered from all sides coincided with each other. On the very first night, from the 14th to the 15th, a fireball descended over the palace of Prince Trubetskoy and set fire to this building.

    This is a fragment from the memoirs of Comte Philippe-Paul de Segur, brigadier general in the Napoleonic army. From this short text, some fans of alternative history conclude that the fire in Moscow in 1812 was the result of the use of Kutuzov, nothing less than a nuclear bomb.

    Judge for yourself how strong the evidence for this theory is.

    First of all, there are no trees in Russia older than 200 years - they burned out due to nuclear explosions. Secondly, there are many round lakes on the territory of the country - these are nothing more than funnels from nuclear explosions.

    Thirdly, in the past there were no cancer patients in Russia, but now there are plenty of them. So, this is all because of the damned radiation, which has not been resolved for more than 200 years! And in order to hide this tragedy, the authorities have rewritten textbooks and hush up the truth. Yes Yes.

    Here, however, one can timidly object that there are trees in Russia that are two thousand years old. And round lakes appear as a result of geological processes on the site of karst failures and ancient volcanoes, or are generally created by human hands. And there were cancer patients before, they simply didn’t know how to diagnose cancer in the past.

    But those who are so filled with their knowledge to believe in Kutuzov's nuclear weapons are unlikely to be satisfied with such excuses.

    4. Once in Siberia and Central Asia the ancient empire of Tartaria was located

    Map of independent Tartaria (in yellow) and Chinese Tartaria (purple) in 1806. Image: Wikimedia Commons

    Here's a brief digression into history - not the nonsense that you might have heard from so-called scientists, but straight up the real truth. Long ago, people from Atlantis and the Hyperboreans founded a powerful state on the territory of Siberia, Central Asia, the Far East and India, which they called Tartaria. People from all over the world lived in it, and they were wisely ruled by the ancestors of modern Russians.

    Indisputable confirmation of the existence of Tartaria can be found in the works of European scientists. Since at least the 13th century, they have described this glorious country on their geographical maps. But later, from about the 19th century, Tartary was forgotten, and this toponym disappeared from European scientific literature.

    Naturally, this is explained by an insidious desire to erase the history of an entire country from the memory of the whole world!

    In fact, the maps depicting the so-called Tartaria are genuine: until the 19th century, European scientists had very limited knowledge about what was happening there in the territory of present-day Manchuria, Siberia and Central Asia.

    Therefore, this region, without bothering, was simply called Tartary, and its inhabitants were called Tatars. When this territory was sufficiently studied, the country was divided on the maps and the actual toponyms were assigned.

    As for the Atlanteans and Hyperboreans (as well as the Reptilians and Annunaki) in Tartaria - if they were there, then, leaving, they carefully took with them all the historical evidence of their existence.

    5. Lenin must not be taken out of the mausoleum, otherwise Russia will lose its sovereignty

    Lenin's funeral, Isaak Brodsky, 1925. Image: Wikimedia Commons

    Finally, a curious theory that explains why the leader of the world proletariat, Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, has not yet been interred. Allegedly, according to the norms of Roman law, he became the owner of the Russian Empire, inheriting it from Nicholas II when he abdicated.

    After Lenin died, there was no one to hand Russia over to. This means that a country that does not belong to anyone can become the object of encroachment by other heirs, if any appear.

    In order to save the sovereignty of the state, they decided to ... consider Ilyich alive, not to bury his body and not to issue a death certificate. And if Lenin lived, is alive and will live, then he remains the owner of Russia. And no one else will pocket it. Cunningly invented, right?

    In fact, it is difficult to see in the above theory even a minimal connection with reality.


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