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+23 +1
Trump Doubles Down on Puerto Rico Conspiracy Theory
President Trump late Friday renewed his claim that Puerto Rico’s death toll from Hurricane Maria was doctored, even after receiving widespread criticism for casting doubt on the deaths of nearly 3,000 people. Citing a Washington Post report that mentioned the fact that Puerto Rican officials initially told Trump only 16 people had died in the hurricane, the president questioned how the death toll then climbed to 64. “Then, like magic, ‘3000 PEOPLE KILLED,’” he tweeted.
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A Puzzle About Conspiracy Theorists (Part I)
You might think that conspiracy theorists like the flat earthers don't really think about things. But if you've ever argued with one, you'll find that they do. They have an answer for everything. So how do we reconcile their irrationality with their rational thinking?
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A man arrested for threatening to kill Trump believed QAnon conspiracy theory: report
Jeffrey Gardner Boyd has been charged with making terrorist threats after allegedly planning to kill the President.
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REMEMBER!! JFK warned us all along!
Image below!
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Sandy Hook Parents Sue Alex Jones for Defamation
Three parents whose children were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 filed a defamation lawsuit on Tuesday against Alex Jones, the right-wing conspiracy theorist who has long claimed the shooting was “completely fake” and a “giant hoax” perpetrated by opponents of the Second Amendment. Mr. Jones, the popular radio show host who also operates the conspiracy theory website Infowars, has questioned for years whether 20 children and six adults died in the school massacre in Newtown, Conn...
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YouTube Will Link To Wikipedia Below Conspiracy Theory Videos
"Information cues" — links to Wikipedia — will appear alongside videos about topics that have inspired significant debate, like the moon landing and chemtrails.
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Conspiracy Theorists Arrested in Sutherland Springs
Four months after 26 people were shot and killed during a church service in Sutherland Springs, those who lost loved ones in the massacre are being haunted by conspiracy theorists who claim it didn’t happen. Fifty-four-year-old Robert Ussery and his partner, Jodi Mann, were arrested by Wilson County Sheriff’s Deputies Monday after harassing the pastor of First Baptist Church and another member of the congregation.
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It Is Always, Always, ALWAYS Okay To Question Official Narratives
On the fifth of April, 2017, CNN staged a fake, scripted interview featuring a seven year-old Syrian girl sounding out pro-regime change talking points syllable-by-syllable using concepts that she could not possibly understand. CNN host Alisyn Camerota was asking the child questions throughout the performance, which means that Camerota necessarily had the other half of the script. CNN has never offered an explanation for this event, and nobody has ever been able to provide me with a plausible defense of it.
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Deep State agent amused and annoyed by your conspiracy theories
An agent of the deep state working undercover with the NSA has expressed mixed feelings toward the conspiracy theories you post online.
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Flat Earth Community Insists Falcon Heavy Launch Was A Hoax
Ever since Donald Trump became the High Priest Of Hate, the word “hoax” has gained new popularity. Global warming is a hoax cooked up by the Chinese. Reports that the Prevaricator in Chief is a serial abuser of women are hoaxes. Democrats are hoaxes. According to the Flat Earth community, last week’s launch of the Falcon Heavy from Cape Canaveral with Elon Musk’s personal Tesla Roadster onboard was a hoax of epic proportions.
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Study: 'Anti-vaxxers' often believe other conspiracy theories
Think vaccines aren't safe? If so, you might also believe that Princess Diana was murdered. That's the finding of new research into the relationship between conspiracy theory beliefs and anti-vaccination attitudes. A survey of more than 5,300 people in 24 countries on five continents found that people who believe in conspiracy theories are more likely to believe that vaccines aren't safe, despite scientific evidence to the contrary.
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What does your conspiracy chart say about you?
There are several kinds of conspiracy webs. By Joseph E. Uscinski.
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Infiltrating the Flat Earth International Conference
Red Ice TV
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Pizzagate: Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal
The revelations overcame Edgar Maddison Welch like a hallucinatory fever. On December 1st, 2016, the father of two from Salisbury, North Carolina, a man whose pastimes included playing Pictionary with his family, tried to persuade two friends to join a rescue mission. Alex Jones, the Info-Wars host, was reporting that Hillary Clinton was sexually abusing children in satanic rituals a few hundred miles north, in the basement of a Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant.
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OK Be Paranoid: Crazy, Crackpot Conspiracies That Were Real
Here's a selection of conspiracies that turned out to be every bit as insane as advertised, and show that perhaps paranoia is not always such a bad thing after all. By Brent Swancer.
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High cognitive ability not a safeguard from conspiracies, paranormal beliefs
The moon landing and global warming are hoaxes. The U.S. government had advance knowledge of the 9/11 attacks. A UFO crashed in Roswell, New Mexico. Is skepticism toward these kinds of unfounded beliefs just a matter of cognitive ability?
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+19 +1
Inside the Crisis Actors Studio
James Lipton
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Vladimir Putin: Computer Genius?
One fundamental issue with models is that they do not cope well with change, such as the kind that happens in an election race, or, for that matter, a war. By Andrew Cockburn.
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Ahem, Alex Jones Now Says Donald Trump Is Being Covertly Drugged
Alex Jones ― the far-right radio host who has trafficked in crackpot conspiracy theories about 9/11, Sandy Hook and the KKK ― told a woozy doozy on Monday. Citing “high level sources” and “multiple people” on his syndicated show, he said that President Donald Trump was being drugged in sodas and iced teas to the point he’s slurring his words at night. And it’s all part of a plot to control him. “They drug presidents because the power structure wants a puppet,” Jones said in the clip below from Media Matters.
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Seth Rich Murder Conspiracy Is Being Used to Sell Face Cream
Trump campaign email vendors are marketing an anti-aging cream with the help of conspiracy theories surrounding the 2016 murder of a Democratic Party staffer. The ad hawking the wrinkle-fighting formula is very clearly a scam. Yet it found its way onto an email list managed by consultants who have worked for some of the most prominent politicians in the country, including President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.
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