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Conspiracy Theory Thread
#76

Conspiracy Theory Thread

If you only watch one conspiracy theory documentary this year, make it this one:

Zeitgeist: The Movie.

Seriously persuasive presentation on a few key subjects - religion, 9/11 / false flags and the controlling elites' instigation of wars and their hand in the funding of wars (both sides). I just watched it on netflix, but it's on Youtube as well.




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#77

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Quote: (09-05-2015 09:21 PM)wi30 Wrote:  

Quote: (08-27-2015 03:01 AM)RBerkley Wrote:  

There is the testosterone conspiracy. Guys from older generations had more testosterone than newer generations when compared to the same age. Some blame GMOs, soy, BPA in plastics and pesticides.

Maybe this is why most guys are balding more earlier in their 20s, than guys from previous generations of the same age group.

Next time you visit a doctor ask him/her to check for testosterone levels, that is, if they will do it. In Ontario, it takes a lot of persuasion for a young guy to have his bloodwork tested for testosterone levels.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't balding purely genetic? As in each man has a predetermined group of hairs that will either stay or fall out?

For example, my brother has my dad's hair and I have my grandpa's hair (dad's side). My dad has always been very thin and my 26 year old brother is following suit with a huge receding hairline. My hair is thick as fuck and when my grandpa died at 92, his hair was thicker than my dad's, who is in his fifties. I also have a 70 year old uncle who shares my coarse hair and he's still got a full head.

In defense of your theory, my brother got super fat after high school and works an office job. Low T could be accelerating his hair loss. I work an active job, eat tons of steak, and frequently work out.

Working against these theories is that, in addition to acne, testosterone promotes baldness (which is why male adolescents have worse acne than girls, and why far more men are bald ("male pattern baldness") than women (who do occasionally lose hair as well)). If younger men had lower T, then they would keep their hair longer.
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#78

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Quote: (09-16-2015 08:51 PM)wi30 Wrote:  

offthereservation, I actually watched that entire documentary in an American Government class in college. The professor was this old guy who refused to toe the liberal party line. It took four class periods to finish and I noticed I was one of the only ones actually paying attention.

He also made us fill out the state names and abbreviations on a blank US map. I was the only one who got all fifty. Granted it was at a school in Oklahoma and most students only got the surrounding states plus Florida and California.

Interesting that it would make it into a classroom anywhere...
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#79

Conspiracy Theory Thread

edit
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#80

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Does anybody else notice how more and more people become aware of the most prominent conspiracy theories?

My little sister (25+ now, so not so little anymore) recently told me how 9/11 was staged.

I was wowed. A lot. She's not the type AT ALL to get into stuff like that.

Just a few minutes ago I witnessed someone explaining the NWO to a bunch of strangers, expecting "Lol you're full of shit" and "You're crazy responses" and what he got was: "Yeah we know, what else is new?"

4 people involved, I heard it by accident and I know it's not a great sample size. But again these people were NOTHING like you'd expect to hang out on the stranger part of the web devouring info on wars, cults and politics.

Anyone else getting that?

Of course the confirmation bias is strong in this one, but still. Tell me what you think.
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#81

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Yes definitely getting that.

This old guy at work broke his leg and was off for an extended period. Came back trying to convince everyone that 9/11 was staged. He must have been doing a bit of googling.
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#82

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Dark Legacy on Amazon prime video. The premise is that the George HW Bush during his time in the CIA was behind the JFK assassination. I've never heard such a theory before but its interesting.

The video is long on relationship based assumptions to connect everything. Given that it was about 50 years ago, its compelling. Toss up of how much credence Ill give it.

See for yourself.
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#83

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Quote: (10-08-2015 04:37 PM)Stirfry Wrote:  

Quote: (09-05-2015 09:21 PM)wi30 Wrote:  

Quote: (08-27-2015 03:01 AM)RBerkley Wrote:  

There is the testosterone conspiracy. Guys from older generations had more testosterone than newer generations when compared to the same age. Some blame GMOs, soy, BPA in plastics and pesticides.

Maybe this is why most guys are balding more earlier in their 20s, than guys from previous generations of the same age group.

Next time you visit a doctor ask him/her to check for testosterone levels, that is, if they will do it. In Ontario, it takes a lot of persuasion for a young guy to have his bloodwork tested for testosterone levels.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't balding purely genetic? As in each man has a predetermined group of hairs that will either stay or fall out?

For example, my brother has my dad's hair and I have my grandpa's hair (dad's side). My dad has always been very thin and my 26 year old brother is following suit with a huge receding hairline. My hair is thick as fuck and when my grandpa died at 92, his hair was thicker than my dad's, who is in his fifties. I also have a 70 year old uncle who shares my coarse hair and he's still got a full head.

In defense of your theory, my brother got super fat after high school and works an office job. Low T could be accelerating his hair loss. I work an active job, eat tons of steak, and frequently work out.

Working against these theories is that, in addition to acne, testosterone promotes baldness (which is why male adolescents have worse acne than girls, and why far more men are bald ("male pattern baldness") than women (who do occasionally lose hair as well)). If younger men had lower T, then they would keep their hair longer.

I shelled-out $30 for a pdf on keeping and growing back your hair. It has a lot of good points in it. Anyway, one of the points I thought was quite plausible was that your skull can continue to expand in size slightly and as such will reduce the blood flow to the hair follicles on your head.. hence male-pattern baldness. A remedy that was suggested was to stretch your scalp by pushing and stretching(without rubbing or dragging your fingers) around with your hands every night or as often as you can.
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#84

Conspiracy Theory Thread

I think that California has something in the food or water that causes test to drop.

More than any other state.

I am saying this because my test dropped tremendously during my stay there.

If you're going to try, go all the way. There is no other feeling like that. You will be alone with the gods, and the nights will flame with fire. You will ride life straight to perfect laughter. It's the only good fight there is.

Disable "Click here to Continue"

My Testosterone Adventure: Part I | Part II | Part III | Part IV | Part V

Quote:Quote:
if it happened to you it’s your fault, I got no sympathy and I don’t believe your version of events.
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#85

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Also today the building manager told me Sandy hook read a hoax.

In an offhand way.

Very main stream, these "conspiracy theories"

If you're going to try, go all the way. There is no other feeling like that. You will be alone with the gods, and the nights will flame with fire. You will ride life straight to perfect laughter. It's the only good fight there is.

Disable "Click here to Continue"

My Testosterone Adventure: Part I | Part II | Part III | Part IV | Part V

Quote:Quote:
if it happened to you it’s your fault, I got no sympathy and I don’t believe your version of events.
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#86

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Met a guy last night who believed in aliens. The Arecibo answer. The tall whites aka the nordics. Phil schneider. Walter Haut. He scribbled down a bunch of things I can't even read today.

This guy is or was a major investor at a venture capital firm you've heard of.

Unreal. Conspiracy theorists are out there and walk among us.

If you're going to try, go all the way. There is no other feeling like that. You will be alone with the gods, and the nights will flame with fire. You will ride life straight to perfect laughter. It's the only good fight there is.

Disable "Click here to Continue"

My Testosterone Adventure: Part I | Part II | Part III | Part IV | Part V

Quote:Quote:
if it happened to you it’s your fault, I got no sympathy and I don’t believe your version of events.
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#87

Conspiracy Theory Thread

The more i read about the nature of sociopaths, the more valid a lot of conspiracy gets. Sociopaths rise to the top in the corporate and political world, and literally give zero fucks (and not in a good way) about doing what it takes to achieve their ends. Ultimately going down the conspiracy rabbit hole will be a negative path to take, and it's one i choose not to go down, but i'm certain there's some pretty substantial fuckery being ran all over the globe right now, same as there ever was...
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#88

Conspiracy Theory Thread

I think most of the "terrorism" we see today are government sponsored in an effort to convince the voting population that what they're spending money is a necessity.

ISIS is a CIA front designed to destabilize Syria so a pipeline from Saudi Arabia can carry natural gas through the country, to Turkey, and then into Europe to destabilize Russian nat gas exports.
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#89

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Zeitgeist is a joke. The scholarship on Jesus is 100 years out of date.

If you're not fucking her, someone else is.
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#90

Conspiracy Theory Thread

(09-06-2015 10:02 AM)Baltimore Bachelor Wrote:
One conspiracy theory that I am starting to believe more and more each day is that the cure for cancer is being suppressed by the pharmaceutical industry just so that they can profit from the expensive treatments.

Anybody else believe this?

Yeah , my friend said he had early stage of tumor, he cured it is with baking soda in a week. Hard to believe. He has no reason to lie. He learnt from dr simoncini that cancer is caused by proliferation of fungus candida and sodium bicarbonate key ingredient in baking soda can stop cancer. He says the pharmaceutical companies want to create lies that it doesn't work and keep selling their expensive chemotherapy and drugs
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#91

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Quote: (01-23-2016 12:10 AM)avantgarde Wrote:  

Yeah , my friend said he had early stage of tumor, he cured it with baking soda in a week. Hard to believe. He has no reason to lie. He learnt from dr simoncini that cancer is caused by proliferation of fungus candida and sodium bicarbonate key ingredient in baking soda can stop cancer. He says the pharmaceutical companies want to create lies that it doesn't work and keep selling their expensive chemotherapy and drugs

Damn, is there anything baking soda can't do?
RVF should get a Nobel Prize in medicine for that.
Praise be upon the baking soda!
[Image: icon_worship.gif]
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#92

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Lol, true baking soda has interesting properties. It is just too basic for fungi and certain bacterium.
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#93

Conspiracy Theory Thread

I honestly believe the Knights of the Round Table 'legend' is real.

1. I previously read the Cornish language the only Celtic language that's receiving a push for revival, while Scottish, Irish, Welsh, Breton, Manx, and Gaelic are still alive and well. I've been previously told the Cornish rendition of Gwenhwyfar (Welsh rendition) is "Jennifer".

2. Given this timeline I'm presenting, the meme "Men fight invaders; women sleep with them" is already true, centuries before The Crusades.

Arthurian England (5th-6th Century)
Viking Conquest of England (8th-9th Century)
The Crusades (1095-1487)

3. Explain to me why the Anglosphere cuckoldry gets hamstered/warped into something socially acceptable.
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#94

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Quote: (09-16-2015 08:51 PM)wi30 Wrote:  

offthereservation, I actually watched that entire documentary in an American Government class in college. The professor was this old guy who refused to toe the liberal party line. It took four class periods to finish and I noticed I was one of the only ones actually paying attention.

He also made us fill out the state names and abbreviations on a blank US map. I was the only one who got all fifty. Granted it was at a school in Oklahoma and most students only got the surrounding states plus Florida and California.

What is the name of this documentary? The link is down, the video no longer exists.
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#95

Conspiracy Theory Thread

"Tim in real life ;
I honestly believe the Knights of the Round Table 'legend' is "

I hope so because we desperately need Merlin to rise again and save England again.

In WWII it was the "Merlin" engine in the Spitfires and a Hurricanes that saved Britain in her darkest hour.
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#96

Conspiracy Theory Thread

Ok first post but a couple of coincidences has made me post this. I didn't check if anyone has posted before but it's the flat earth theory. I really can't get my head around this ( sorry about the pun) as it goes against everything you've been taught from day 1 but I see more and more chatter about this subject. Lots of YouTube videos also. Anyone else heard /know about this?
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#97

Conspiracy Theory Thread

The Flat Earth conspiracy is a deliberate mind fuck, it's designed to discredit legit conspiracies. It is incredibly easy to debunk. It's geared towards that particular category of people who are prone to question authority (not a bad thing) but have low scientific IQs. Those people in turn become useful idiots and end up turning off the smarter public off of real conspiracies.

Another similar pseudo-scientific conspiracy that "poisons the well" is the crap about shape-shifting reptilians.

The term "conspiracy theory" is itself an actual conspiracy, it was actively promoted by the PTB in the 1960s in order to socially marginalize those who doubted the official version of the Warren Report on the JFK assassination. You have a bunch of other terms like "tinfoil", "grassy knoll" that are also loaded. If you control the language people use, you control their thought process.

Other examples of verbal thought control are terms like "safe space", "triggering". Those terms were invented and popularized to create a certain victimhood mindset on a subconscious level.

“Nothing is more useful than to look upon the world as it really is.”
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#98

Conspiracy Theory Thread

As a rule of thumb, I hold that any contradictory theory on most, and especially recent, sensitive issues or events, that has a lot of traction with the public, either will be entirely false or largely true with a critical falsehood (ie: if an event is undeniable but the causative details need to be obscured).

The more outlandish theories (ie: aliens) are entirely false.

I'm of the opinion that public information is more controlled then you and I are led to believe. Ironically, with (false) conspiracy theories doing much of the work in giving the public the false impression that there is increasingly available valid information on sensitive issues and events as opposed to merely an increase in noise.

Here's a conspiracy theory:

What if as public perception continues to acknowledge a seemingly consistent increase in the relative availability of valid information (due to the internet and personal recording devices), the actual amount of valid information on sensitive subjects is contracting?

What if you were to discover that nothing that is both legitimately sensitive and valid ever makes it to print, even on the internet (and never ever in ink), aside from a rare rogue disclosure that is likely widely ignored when it isn't immediately censored?

I'm not saying that this is the case with absolutely everything all of the time. Only that it is likely the case with sensitive subjects almost all of the time, as an educated guess born out of what I have observed.
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#99

Conspiracy Theory Thread

There is a thread just for flat earth discussion if you really want to get into it.

thread-36254.html


Just posted some photos and great "maps" there.
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Conspiracy Theory Thread

There is a great deal of mystery surrounding the small hamlet of Rennes-le-Château in France. During the 1800s, a priest named Bérenger Saunière came into enormous wealth while officially only having only a very modest income stream. Despite being a modest priest of a small French village, Saunière had a number of very powerful and influential acquaintances such as the Archduke Johann Salvator von Habsburg and his confidant of many years, Emma Calve, a woman who was prominent in Parisian esoteric circles at the time.

With the unexplained wealth he acquired, he was able to reconstruct the local church, which was reputed to have dated back to the 6th century. When removing some of the old structure, documents with esoteric codes were found within the stone structure and promptly removed. The church was reconstructed in a very odd manner for a Catholic church. Inscriptions with the words "This place is terrible" were etched into the church, as well as demonic imagery, and the skull and bones, a prominent symbol within Rosicrucian freemasonry.

[Image: Totenkopf_Rennes-le-Chateau.jpg]

[Image: St.Madeleine_Inschrift.JPG]

[Image: Asmodis_Rennes.JPG]

His enormous unexplained wealth raised the suspicion of the local clergy. The bishop called him to account, to which he refused to explain the source of his wealth. The local tribunal suspended him, but curiously, the vatican overruled them and reinstated him. Shortly thereafter, despite being in reputed excellent health for his age, he suffered an unexplained stroke. Before he died, another priest was brought in to administer last rites, but refused to do so. Upon his death, he left no will, and it is believed that whatever wealth he maintained was passed to Marie Denarnaud.

After WW2, the French government instituted a new currency, and asked for the exchange of old francs for the new currency. Rather than explain the source of her wealth, Marie was seen burning her massive collection of old franc notes. Before her death, she promised the purchaser of her villa that she would give him a powerful secret. Before she could offer her secret, she suffered an unexplained stroke and died.

Going further back into history, Rennes-le-Château was an important city in both Roman and Visigothic times. Some believe that the treasures the Romans recovered during the sack of Jerusalem in 70AD from the temple of Solomon were brought to Rome. During the sack of Rome by the Visigoths in the 5th century AD, it is alleged that the treasures of Jerusalem were brought back to Rennes-le-Château.

One of the documents recovered during excavation of the ruins of the old church makes a cryptic allusion to Poisson, a famous 17th century French painter. An interesting side note is that after visiting Poissin in 1656, Nicolas Fouquet, the Superintendent of Finances to Louis XIV of France wrote an intriguing letter to the to his brother. It read:

Quote:Quote:

He and I discussed certain things, which I shall with ease be able to explain to you in detail things which will give you, through Monsieur Poussin, advantages which even kings would have great pains to draw from him, and which, according to him, it is possible that nobody else will ever rediscover in the centuries to come. And what is more, these are things so difficult to discover that nothing now on this earth can prove of better fortune nor be their equal.

Shortly thereafter Fouquet was imprisoned for the remainder of his life in complete isolation, with all of his correspondence confiscated. Following the imprisonment of Fouquet, the King of France went to great lengths to obtain and sequester Poissin's original "Les Bergers d’Arcadie" into his private apartment of Versailles.

[Image: PoussinBergersArcadie.jpg]
Et in Arcadia ego (Les Bergers d'Arcadie), Nicolas Poussin (1638)

For centuries, official art experts maintained that the scene depicted in the painting was wholly mythical and dismissed any theories that the inscribed tomb existed as conspiracy theory.

Quote:Quote:

In the early 1970s, however, an actual tomb was located, identical to the one in the painting identical in setting, dimensions, proportions, shape, surrounding vegetation, even in the circular outcrop of rock on which one of Poussin’s shepherds rests his foot. This actual tomb stands on the outskirts of a village called Arques -approximately six miles from Rennes-leChateau, and three miles from the chateau of Blanchefort. If one stands before the sepulchre the vista is virtually indistinguishable from that in the painting. And then it becomes apparent that one of the peaks in the background of the painting is Rennes-leChateau. There is no indication of the age of the tomb. It may, of course, have been erected quite recently but how did its builders ever locate a setting which matches so precisely that of the painting? In fact it would seem to have been standing in Poussin’s time, and “Les Bergers d’Arcadie’ would seem to be a faithful rendering of the actual site. According to the peasants in the vicinity, the tomb has been there for as long as they, their parents and grandparents can remember. And there is said to be specific mention of it in a memoire dating from 1709.

Some believe the inscription on the painting "Et in Arcadia ego" is a latin anagram that when transcribed, translates to "Begone! I conceal the secrets of God!"

There are many strange unexplained coincidences surrounding Rennes-le-Château, Bérenger Saunière, and the mysterious ancient tomb which was discovered. For those who are interested in further research, I'd recommend reading "Holy Blood, Holy Grail" by Michael Baigent et al. It can be found online in epub, kindle, and pdf form here:
https://archive.org/details/HolyBloodholyGrail

The BBC also produced a documentary regarding it:




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