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Are there any credible conspiracy theories?

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    Really?


    So how many Crimeans wanted to secede from Ukraine and return to Russia? Was it a majority?
    Is that not the definition of democracy or is it just pluralism or mob rule or some other epithet?


    And I'm not tabling any conspiracy here. Rather I'm trying to counter one, i.e. that you are trying to sell the inane idea that Russia invaded and gobbled up Crimea the same way that Adolf just decided that the Sudetenland or any other place he wanted was for Deutschland.


    Again, I'm sure the Godwin's Law crew will chime in, but that's their bag.


    DJ comes up with these meaningless "treaties" about border integrity and the respect under law for boundaries. Must be having apoplexy over the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars then if that's so sacrosanct. A bunch of mythical "little green men" in Crimea is a "cause celebre" for rallying yet a NATO army wrecking the richest country in Africa is grand, all under the moronic pretense that the leader gives his men Viagra to rape people.



    Bashar Assad is supposed to be gassing his people. Even though US Special Forces are robbing the oil from the North East of the country and shipping it to Malta.



    The Saudis chop up a guy in Turkey under the connivance of one of their despicable princes/kings to shut him the fcuk up yet you weep for Navalny who I would think is getting a better deal.


    So, there has not been any invasion of Ukraine. There are no Russian bombers about to land in Shannon. Red October is not off the coast of Copenhagen or Aberdeen or Killybegs about to force us all to eat borscht, though not a bad soup.


    Russian invasion.....COP ON!

    Russia landed troops in Crimea to guard over key installations, Putin said they weren't Russian, then later admitted on national TV that they were. A fake "referendum" was held just a weeks later. Treaties were ignored. Only 10 or so world countries actually recognise Crimea as Russian, and they are the usual tinpot suspects, Syria, Venezuela, etc.

    Crimea and Sevastopol were illegally annexed.

    Again, apart from the Kremlin obviously having this all planned, I don't see any conspiracy


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,885 ✭✭✭✭astrofool


    So is this thread basically ShatterAlan trying to turn a non conspiracy into a conspiracy and then wailing that some conspiracies can be true, look at this thing that happened that I now want to call a conspiracy?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,402 ✭✭✭McGinniesta


    I've found that there are several conspiracy theories are entertaining.

    The Paul McCartney is dead theory is one that is entertaining. Complete nonsense but harmless and entertaining.

    Another was that the titanic was involved in an alleged insurance fraud.

    Then there are the conspiracies there were actually true.

    The one that comes to mind is the MK Ultra mind control programme that was run by the CIA. All declassifiied and true.

    Then there are the controversial or dubious ones that you could argue. The like of the JFK or 9\11.

    I believe that it is valid to have concerns or questions about 9\11. Whether it was an inside job or a set up is perhaps stretching it but there is certainly an argument to be made for criminal negligence.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe



    The one that comes to mind is the MK Ultra mind control programme that was run by the CIA. All declassifiied and true.

    Absolutely. In fact, conspiracies and collusion happen all the time, you only have to open a newspaper. We have a habit of regularly uncovering them.
    I believe that it is valid to have concerns or questions about 9\11. Whether it was an inside job or a set up is perhaps stretching it but there is certainly an argument to be made for criminal negligence.

    Whenever a terrorist attack is foiled, it's barely news. And whenever one succeeds the first questions asked are surrounding negligence, intelligence failures, protocols and so on.

    Neither are related to 9/11 conspiracy theories which are off in a disjointed fantasy world of their own with no credible evidence


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,807 ✭✭✭ShatterAlan


    astrofool wrote: »
    So is this thread basically ShatterAlan trying to turn a non conspiracy into a conspiracy and then wailing that some conspiracies can be true, look at this thing that happened that I now want to call a conspiracy?


    Are you saying that conspiracies can be true or not true?


    The definition of a conspiracy is one or more people plotting to conduct actions outside the law.

    How can that be true or untrue? I'm not certain what you think a conspiracy is but I will try to shed a little light. We are not talking about outlandish concepts here. We are not talking about magic or impossibilities or paranormal activity. We are talking about a very simple and discernible truth.


    Julius Caesar was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy.
    So was Abraham Lincoln, so was Anwar Sadat and Indira Ghandhi and Yitzhak Rabin....<fill in name>.
    That is what a conspiracy IS. It is people teaming up and CONSPIRING.


    Was JFK or RFK killed as a result of a conspiracy? The official narrative says they were killed by lone gunmen with an axe to grind. Maybe, maybe not.



    We have just recently learned that people at Ballymurphy were deliberately killed and the govenment CONSPIRED to cover it up. The UK Government CONSPIRED to whitewash the events and gave tacit, if not, avid consent to have the narrative not only besmirched but hidden.


    So, if you think that something can be hidden and all the while that it is being hidden those who wish to know more can be dismissed as "conspiracy theorists" and THEN when the truth outs like Bloody Sunday or Hillsbourough or Mi Lai you wash it away as a scandal or a "dark chapter" or a "terrible mistake", then you might want to stop calling people nutcase and tinfoil hatters simply because they express skepticism.


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  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    astrofool wrote: »
    So is this thread basically ShatterAlan trying to turn a non conspiracy into a conspiracy and then wailing that some conspiracies can be true, look at this thing that happened that I now want to call a conspiracy?

    Isn't that what the thread title is about? Finding real conspiracies.

    My feeling on conspiracies is that they happen all the time. Look at Northern Ireland and the British secret service actions. Now try explaining what is well known here to a brit, and their eyes will roll.

    The stupid conspiracies, like Q, Pizzagate, moon landings fakes, and so on might be a psych op to discredit real conspiracies. But that's a conspiracy theory itself.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    We have just recently learned that people at Ballymurphy were deliberately killed and the govenment CONSPIRED to cover it up. The UK Government CONSPIRED to whitewash the events and gave tacit, if not, avid consent to have the narrative not only besmirched but hidden.

    There is a certain type of person who will admit that conspiracies have happened in the past but that's it now. All new conspiracy theories are junk. I am not talking about normal skepticism either.

    This is an unfalsifiable position. If some conspiracy is proven, it immediately becomes something about the past and the skeptic knows that while conspiracies have happened in the past, they don't happen now, nor will they in the future.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    fvp4 wrote: »
    There is a certain type of person who will admit that conspiracies have happened in the past but that's it now. All new conspiracy theories are junk. I am not talking about normal skepticism either.

    As mentioned, conspiracies happen all the time. Simply read the news.

    However most "conspiracies" on this forum are completely made-up false conspiracies with little or no credible evidence. Also, many are from the past (JFK, 9/11, etc)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,413 ✭✭✭silliussoddius


    fvp4 wrote: »
    Isn't that what the thread title is about? Finding real conspiracies.

    My feeling on conspiracies is that they happen all the time. Look at Northern Ireland and the British secret service actions. Now try explaining what is well known here to a brit, and their eyes will roll.

    The stupid conspiracies, like Q, Pizzagate, moon landings fakes, and so on might be a psych op to discredit real conspiracies. But that's a conspiracy theory itself.

    No need to invoke another conspiracy, people have always been attracted to nonsense.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    As mentioned, conspiracies happen all the time. Simply read the news.

    However most "conspiracies" on this forum are completely made-up false conspiracies with little or no credible evidence. Also, many are from the past (JFK, 9/11, etc)

    I didn't qualify "this forum" though.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    Russia landed troops in Crimea to guard over key installations, Putin said they weren't Russian, then later admitted on national TV that they were. A fake "referendum" was held just a weeks later. Treaties were ignored. Only 10 or so world countries actually recognise Crimea as Russian, and they are the usual tinpot suspects, Syria, Venezuela, etc.

    Crimea and Sevastopol were illegally annexed.

    Again, apart from the Kremlin obviously having this all planned, I don't see any conspiracy

    For a while there I thought you are talking about Kosovo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    fvp4 wrote: »
    There is a certain type of person who will admit that conspiracies have happened in the past but that's it now. All new conspiracy theories are junk. I am not talking about normal skepticism either.

    This is an unfalsifiable position. If some conspiracy is proven, it immediately becomes something about the past and the skeptic knows that while conspiracies have happened in the past, they don't happen now, nor will they in the future.

    Could not say it any better.
    I would only add - Nothing to see here move on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    fvp4 wrote: »
    I didn't qualify "this forum" though.

    It's the same anywhere.

    People who believe in extreme theories use the "conspiracies have happened before" trope on a constant basis. Just because something happened in the past doesn't mean it's happening now. Their validators also commonly use the same fallacy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,487 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    It's the same anywhere.

    People who believe in extreme theories use the "conspiracies have happened before" trope on a constant basis. Just because something happened in the past doesn't mean it's happening now. Their validators also commonly use the same fallacy.

    Also, it was much easier to get away with stuff in the past. People these days have far more access to data, information, other people, high quality cameras and video recording devices, etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    It's the same anywhere.

    People who believe in extreme theories use the "conspiracies have happened before" trope on a constant basis. Just because something happened in the past doesn't mean it's happening now. Their validators also commonly use the same fallacy.

    You do not realize or refuse to acknowledge that life is quite fluid. Some things we deemed conspiracy theories turned out to be true and other stuff we thought is a fact was in turn found to be pure conspiracy theory.
    All that is needed is just time.
    Such one sided approach like rejecting everything that does not align with your own world view is more like a faith.
    I would even say that lack of evidence or proof is often hidden behind term you like to use very often - "current consensus".
    Quite a lot of stuff what once was "current consensus" became false, wrong or outright lie. One should be open to possibilities that not everything is just black and white.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Also, it was much easier to get away with stuff in the past. People these days have far more access to data, information, other people, high quality cameras and video recording devices, etc.

    With what you described and technological advance it is also quite easier to create better illusion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,487 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    With what you described and technological advance it is also quite easier to create better illusion.

    Yeah, and conspiracy theorists are falling for illusions created by others all the time as a result.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    You do not realize or refuse to acknowledge that life is quite fluid. Some things we deemed conspiracy theories turned out to be true and other stuff we thought is a fact was in turn found to be pure conspiracy theory.

    Conspiracies happen all the time, literally every day. Do we see them discussed here? no.

    99% of the personal conspiracies put forward on this forum are complete nonsense. I've been here for years, feel free to point out the stuff which turned out to be true that came from users here.

    People use conspiracies that have happened to project their own brand of nonsense.
    All that is needed is just time.
    Such one sided approach like rejecting everything that does not align with your own world view is more like a faith.

    "All that is needed is just time", is literally a faith based argument.

    People with extreme beliefs often operate with a simplistic black/white view of the world, a good/bad notion, and gravitate towards the tinfoil stuff
    I would even say that lack of evidence or proof is often hidden behind term you like to use very often - "current consensus".
    Quite a lot of stuff what once was "current consensus" became false, wrong or outright lie. One should be open to possibilities that not everything is just black and white.

    Consensus answers it for you. If 1000 experts arrive at theory X and 6 arrive at Y, then the most likely current theory, to the best of our knowledge, is X. Emphasis in italics.

    Exceptions are always possible, but they remain exceptions, not systematic.

    However on forums like this, it's like the land of Narnia, in here Y is as likely to be correct, all the scientists who came to X are part of a conspiracy, "science has been wrong in the past", some unrelated conspiracy happened previously, this one scientist on Youtube confirms my bias so all others are incorrect - a never-ending stream of bad logic

    You rarely find this type of systematic nonsense thinking on history or science forums, there's a reason for that. Conspiracy theory forums are black holes for the whole 9 yards: faulty thinking, logical fallacies, "gish gallop", bad sources, empty claims, accusations of "shilling", you name it, it's here


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,009 ✭✭✭✭The Nal


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    One should be open to possibilities that not everything is just black and white.

    Of course. the problem is, that a lot of people now instantly assume theres a conspiracy and then stick to their guns. EG a mass shooting is a false flag within an hour. We dont even have the death toll or know anything about the shooter - yet its a false flag.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    The Nal wrote: »
    Of course. the problem is, that a lot of people now instantly assume theres a conspiracy and then stick to their guns. EG a mass shooting is a false flag within an hour. We dont even have the death toll or know anything about the shooter - yet its a false flag.

    Because world is smaller and news travel faster. Like some of recent shootings blamed on white supremacists or police only to turn out complete opposite.
    There is no such thing as credible conspiracy theory as all conspiracy theories are precisely such - conspiracy theories. Until the are not. It usually take some time or some whistleblower.
    I would not search for credible one as when some turns out credible it usually means there is something about it. Some are pretty wild like alien abductions but who knows - these days anything is possible. To be honest when someone is afraid of spiders or heights we do have diagnosis for that. Male can proclaim to be woman and vice versa pretty much anytime they feel like. All that suppose to be perfectly normal yet when someone is thinking they were abducted by aliens or they are afraid of vaccines or blood clots suddenly compassion is out and people are in for full attack, mockery and ridicule.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,323 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    Male can proclaim to be woman and vice versa pretty much anytime they feel like. All that suppose to be perfectly normal yet when someone is thinking they were abducted by aliens or they are afraid of vaccines or blood clots suddenly compassion is out and people are in for full attack, mockery and ridicule.

    Lol. Yup. Being Trans is exactly like believing you were abducted by aliens.:rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,413 ✭✭✭silliussoddius


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    Because world is smaller and news travel faster. Like some of recent shootings blamed on white supremacists or police only to turn out complete opposite.
    There is no such thing as credible conspiracy theory as all conspiracy theories are precisely such - conspiracy theories. Until the are not. It usually take some time or some whistleblower.
    I would not search for credible one as when some turns out credible it usually means there is something about it. Some are pretty wild like alien abductions but who knows - these days anything is possible. To be honest when someone is afraid of spiders or heights we do have diagnosis for that. Male can proclaim to be woman and vice versa pretty much anytime they feel like. All that suppose to be perfectly normal yet when someone is thinking they were abducted by aliens or they are afraid of vaccines or blood clots suddenly compassion is out and people are in for full attack, mockery and ridicule.

    You mean lies, speculation, gossip. And the idea that all opinions are equal, where the onus of proof is no longer on the person making the claim and "theories" need to be proven incorrect


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,513 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    You mean lies, speculation, gossip. And the idea that all opinions are equal, where the onus of proof is no longer on the person making the claim and "theories" need to be proven incorrect

    .
    A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    You mean lies, speculation, gossip. And the idea that all opinions are equal, where the onus of proof is no longer on the person making the claim and "theories" need to be proven incorrect

    “Every lie contains truth, and every truth contains a lie”
    Aki Shimizu


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    “Every lie contains truth, and every truth contains a lie”
    Aki Shimizu

    Read your average conspiracy forum, you'll find it chock full of lies

    Hell just look at the Covid threads on this forum from the last year:

    Masks were part of a conspiracy
    Lockdown was a conspiracy
    It was all a plan to install global Communism
    A plan to install global Fascism
    A plan by "Satan"
    By the NWO
    By the "Elites"
    It was all fake
    It was a plan by governments all over the world to destroy their economies
    and many, many more

    A never-ending stack of lies and made-up fantasies. If enough people fling enough random muck at every major world event, eventually they'll be "right" about something.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,181 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    Read your average conspiracy forum, you'll find it chock full of lies

    Hell just look at the Covid threads on this forum from the last year:

    Masks were part of a conspiracy
    Lockdown was a conspiracy
    It was all a plan to install global Communism
    A plan to install global Fascism
    A plan by "Satan"
    By the NWO
    By the "Elites"
    It was all fake
    It was a plan by governments all over the world to destroy their economies
    and many, many more

    A never-ending stack of lies and made-up fantasies. If enough people fling enough random muck at every major world event, eventually they'll be "right" about something.

    Thing is that by listing all of it you can be pretty sure that some of it may turn out to be true. Which one is hard to say, every theory you mentioned do have quite a bit of followers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    patnor1011 wrote: »
    Thing is that by listing all of it you can be pretty sure that some of it may turn out to be true. Which one is hard to say, every theory you mentioned do have quite a bit of followers.

    "A broken clock is right twice a day"

    Forget evidence, logic, reason, academia, investigation - a million paranoid deluded people on the internet will eventually guess something that vaguely turns out to be true


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,230 ✭✭✭jaxxx


    I have a conspiracy theory!

    99.99999% of all humans.. .. .. are idiots.

    And yes, I include myself in that. I am ugly, dumb and so blunt that I couldn't pop a balloon with a knife, but a hypocrite I am not!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,009 ✭✭✭✭The Nal


    Interesting

    Conspiracy theorists lack critical thinking skills: New study


    https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/science/2021/07/25/conspiracy-theorists-lack-critical-thinking/

    The "see other perspectives" point is crucial.

    As is "the desire to be seen as unique and special serves as a motivation for conspiracy theorising."



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,487 ✭✭✭Fighting Tao


    critical thinking should be thought at school. It’s crazy how many people gobble up nonsense.



  • Registered Users Posts: 382 ✭✭Unicorn Milk Latte


    How about a scientific approach: evaluating conspiracy theories, based on data gathered from actual conspiracies?


    With 'actual conspiracies' I mean things like politicians and business people conspiring - like offering and accepting bribes - and being caught, and brought to court, with data driven proof of their interaction, like financial records, or phone records.

    Something like this:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/27/cardinal-denies-financial-crimes-in-biggest-ever-vatican-trial

    Looking at things like:

    • how many people were involved
    • how long was this going on
    • personalities, professions, background of the people involved
    • what was the gain (financial, political)
    • who profited
    • how were they found out


    So, if, hypothetically, there are no actual conspiracies that involve hundreds of people, that have no clear gain, that have people of integrity conspiring and keeping quiet, that could indicate that conspiracy theories claiming these things are not a description of anything going on in reality.


    An extension of that could also be to look at sites like Facebook or conspiracy video sites, and see how many of their conspiracy theories resulted in something tangible, like arrests, convictions, changes in legislation, etc.



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,807 ✭✭✭ShatterAlan



    Why would it be a problem for Russians to land Russian troops onto and in and around Russian Naval base?

    The Black Sea port of Sevastopol was and IS a miulitary naval base for the Russian blue fleet. Surely if you have a problem with Russian soldiers arriving therein then why weren't you crying about Russian warships, frigates, submarines, etc. accessing the port for years?

    You also talk of a fake referendum. Pew and Gallup saw no impropriety in the referendum. The Crimeans have been calling for a a referendum to become part of Russia again since 1991/2

    In conclusion, if the majority of Novirussian Crimeans were annexed against their will, then where is the resistance to this foreign "gun to the head" occupation? I don't see any "free Crimea movement" or the usual suspects landing boatloads of arms to a seperatist movement. I don't see any clamours for help such as "free us all from the Russian tyranny and let us go back to being second class citizens, ruled by Kiev"

    All I see is a beautiful area with people enjoying their lives. Have a look. And then the odd moron claiming that the Tatars are being marginalised.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    Pay attention to what was written. "Russia landed troops in Crimea to guard over key installations, Putin said they weren't Russian, then later admitted on national TV that they were.". They seized the whole region not just Sevastopol. That was illegal, and the referendum was illegitimate. As such it wasn't internationally recognised by most countries. Online polling sites like Pew and Gallop aren't election observers. Many in Crimea wanted to join Russia but that doesn't validate Russia illegally annexing Crimea and holding a false vote.

    If the Irish army decided to rush into Northern Ireland, take key installations, then hold a "referendum" in 3 weeks that offered Irish rule or greater autonomy from English rule - it wouldn't be internationally recognised either, regardless of how many Irish supported it.

    The whole thing was masterfully done by the Kremlin. Conspiracy theorists love to hate "the West", in line with their tiresome narrative that "the good guys are bad" and as such feel they have to constantly defend leaders like Putin. Which is hilariously ironic considering he's a corrupt authoritarian leader who is unfathomably rich on a state salary, has been in power for 20 years, oversees a vast state media propaganda apparatus, and regularly has opposition politicians (and others) jailed, poisoned and murdered.

    Post edited by Dohnjoe on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,246 ✭✭✭TomSweeney


    Building 7 never sits well with me ...

    Just the way it fell, using linear motion maths, the roof basically fell in the time it would take to fall if there was nothing underneath it ... like a controlled demolition.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭Cheerful S


     Russian trained naval/ground troops inside Crimea long before the Maidan revolution. . Putin, of course, was happy to take the area of Crimea back for Russia, Let us not be stupid here, indigenous population gave the green men soldiers flowers and chocolates, so it is very hard to call this an invasion, strictest sense. .. There wasn’t even an actual insurgency here against Russia. The insurgency was against the newly formed government in Kyiv.

    Ukraine has a shared blood history with Russia. You hardly expect them to just sit back and watch Nato loyalists take over the country and turn the weapons against them. Nato is there to destroy Russia in case of war. It’s hardly a friendly group. So actually no surprise Russia would mobilize for war Ukraine requested to join Nato here. We have to respect national security concerns even it is a hostile country, our leaders don't like and hypocrisy, when the Soviet Union placed nukes in Cuba area hundreds of miles away from the border of the US, the military in the US planned ground invasion and air attack to take them out. Russia not going to stand by here and let Ukraine be a Nato country at the side of its borders.

    Didn't illegally do it, they held an election and the people of Crimea picked a side.. What way do you think the vote would have ended up different with EU inspectors there? It's silly to call it a false vote.

    For Example gave, in Northern Ireland people the majority decided to remain with the UK. It is an accepted vote. Crimea is a small state so what’s the difference, the majority decided the preferred Russian Kremlin rulers to the EU. Propaganda on Western TV sets never going to change viewpoints of people living in Crimea. These people loyalty to Russia, accept it, and move on. Sending weapons to Ukraine and pushing them to join Nato hardly the right to stop an Invasion. Russia could easily takeover Ukraine at any time in the last decade, they decided to keep the status quo for peace.

    Post edited by Cheerful S on


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭Cheerful S


    The event is very strange. Seven was announced to have fallen before it did so on TV. Most people don't think much of it, and its true people feared the building was going to collapse, but NIST official response and excuse about the collapse is a girder located on the 12th floor slipped off its seat-bearing between the time 5.19 pm and 5.20 pm- other structural support failures took place and, the rest of it fell down. It wasn't even a reported damaged section of the building contributed here to bring it down. least according to NIST. Fact is the claim is an Isolated, extremely rare trigger event took place an event that was never reported before in fires in buildings of this height, and NIST stands by it this theory today. There is no possible way anyone could have predicted this single isolated failure event ahead of time on 9/11. This is why people wonder about the announcement and who gave the information to the news!!

    If this one single girder does not come off the seat there is no collapse at all (end of debate) following NIST views about the collapse. This is why in my opinion AE911truth has valid reasons to be concerned and question the narrative. Based on logical sound science accumulated over decades it's not possible this girder could have slipped from its seat. It's been proven beyond all doubt they lied multiple times about the construction anyway, so how does the theory work in practice??



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    The BBC made a reporting mistake, like many live reports did on the day.

    No one can produce any credible alternative regarding 9/11, that's because there isn't one. Same with Sandy Hook, Boston bombing, 7/7, etc. It's always the same, a bunch of individuals claiming "something else" happened, but completely unable to support or even explain what that something is.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,323 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    The BBC thing is a perfect example.

    No conspiracy theorist has ever been able to explain the alternative here. Whenever they're asked they do everything in their power to avoid acknowledging the question. They'll ignore, abuse, cry, run away. They won't directly answer the question.

    I'm always curious why they do this. But will never get an answer for that either.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe



    This is how it works for modern "popular" conspiracy theories:

    An event happens. A certain type of individual sees coverage of the event and decides that it's "implausible" or "suspicious" to them, therefore some sort of conspiracy must be involved. That decision is cemented as a belief despite little direct evidence of any conspiracy itself. Characteristically there's no interest in the conspiracy or any details of it. They retroactively attack/discredit facts surrounding the event in order to hint that "something else happened".

    To see it in action, just go to any popular conspiracy forum after a large event.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,323 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    I think the process is more like:

    A certain individual wants there to be a conspiracy theory.

    That person sees conspiracy coverage on the internet.

    That persona accepts that the conspiracy is unerringly true.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    Indeed and there'll often be a pattern of it

    On top of that, if you want to know about something, you'll go seek out proper information on it, expertise. The very last place someone would go to find genuine information is a conspiracy forum or site. They are seeking out conspiracy stuff, and it's not like they don't know they are:

    "I'm really interested in the 1969 moon landings and craft used, I'll just check out this conspiracy forum to find out more about it"



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,688 ✭✭✭storker


    @Dohnjoe "The whole thing was masterfully done by the Kremlin. Conspiracy theorists love to hate "the West", in line with their tiresome narrative that "the good guys are bad" and as such feel they have to constantly defend leaders like Putin. Which is hilariously ironic considering he's a corrupt authoritarian leader who is unfathomably rich on a state salary, has been in power for 20 years, oversees a vast state media propaganda apparatus, and regularly has opposition politicians (and others) jailed, poisoned and murdered."

    And as far as the CT community goes, it's a case of "move along, nothing to see here..." 😁



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭Cheerful S


    An educated person, hopefully, will understand the information contained?

    Building Seven collapse broke the law of action and reaction here. There are no exceptions, always will be collisions and interactions with construction objects slowing the fall. The path is never clear during a natural collapse of floors due to fire. The fact there is no pushback across the width of the building from one side to next across 8 floors, is plenty of evidence, this was not a natural event. Each to the own what the choose to believe.

    NIST is well aware of the law and why freefall is a problem.

    NIST

    Sunder: “[A] free-fall time would be an object that has no structural components below it.... What the analysis shows...is that same time it took for the structural model to come down...is 5.4 seconds. It’s about 1.5 seconds, or roughly 40 percent, more time for that free fall to happen. And that is not at all unusual because there was structural resistance that was provided in this particular case.”

    NIST spokesperson Sunder even admits here in this statement that freefall can't be because there was structural resistance provided in their model. The cover-up later smoke and mirrors. NIST is well aware there is never a clear path during a natural collapse.

    Post edited by Cheerful S on


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Thats definitely interesting. For me, Building 7 and the BBC report is just too on the nose. Imagine the amount of people who would have to be involved to keep that secret between people who worked there, the emergency services to a news agency. The pre-planning etc.. I did think originally that it was a bit strange or it might have even been brought down to stop a domino effect but kept secret for insurance reasons etc... but after working in TV for some time, my mind changed on this. Reporters at the time would have been listening to radio conversations to get as much info as possible for information gathering. My personal feeling was somebody picked up a radio conversation warning about a possible collapse of building seven which was then misheard. Then reported.....



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,323 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    So leaving aside the fact this has been debunked and explained to you why it's not true. Let's pretend it is true.

    What's the plausible alternative for why there was free fall of the building?

    For what you claim to be true to happen, it requires that every single support in that building (or over 8 floors) has to be removed all at once all at the same time. The only way to do this is to simultaneously uses explosives of every support.

    If you don't do this, then free fall is impossible according to you and your primary school level of physics.

    An educated person will understand why your alternative is not credible or reasonable.

    My alternative is that most conspiracy theorists and Cheerful in particular are just wrong about their physics claims.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭Cheerful S


    Thanks for the post. I don’t claim the BBC report is a conspiracy. Twin towers fell that day, so there was a tendency to believe another building could come down due to fire among people in the area. Event is not what it seems, so i am open all scenarios that someone planted the seed the building would fall, so it look less suspicious?

    How seven actually collapsed on this day, when a plane never hit it. Many people are looking at how and why for decades.

    One column failure cannot cause a freefall scenario. For this to happen every column interior and perimeter, 84 in total, would have to go almost at the same time. These columns are not in one area, the spread across the span of the building. If you watch videos, you see the building motionless, even when the penthouse collapsed, then almost suddenly it drops. It is now in freefall.

    NIST was convinced there was no freefall in Aug 2008, the final draft conference they held. Truther measured freefall having occurred since he was a Physics teacher (knew his stuff) he was able to get a question asked during a conference call. All captured on video by the way. 

    This was part of the reply.

    [A] free-fall time would be an object that has no structural components below it.... What the analysis shows...is that same time it took for the structural model to come down...is 5.4 seconds. It’s about 1.5 seconds, or roughly 40 percent, more time for that free fall to happen. And that is not at all unusual because there was structural resistance that was provided in this particular case.”

    NIST said the collapse model computer engineered by them showed no freefall!! debunkers never understand why this is an issue still dont! NIST even says the slower time is expected because there was structural resistance provided underneath. This all makes sense, explaining a collapse of a building due to fire!!!.

    The reality is freefall occurred. For freefall to happen there be no structural resistance to slow the fall. Only can be explained by a demolition job.,



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    You've done this multiple times already, where you start the whole 9/11 thing from the beginning and go through all the same denial/incredulity.

    It's really simple, did something else happen? If yes, what was it. Do you still think secret Nazi's were involved, if yes, how?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    Indeed, plenty of things were misreported on the day, it's live news.

    As for the BBC being "forewarned", why would the perpetrators of a secret inside job call up a foreign news agency and tell them the precise time a building was going to fall, what motive could they possibly have for needlessly exposing their plan? All the news agencies would report a falling building anyway, so why on earth would a news agency need to be told? It serves utterly no purpose.



  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    i don’t really understand the obsession with building 7. What are people saying, that the conspirators went out of their way to demolish three buildings, but only remembered to fly planes into two?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,189 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    It wasn't hit by a plane, how did a 47 story steel framed building just fall so uniformly from tiny office fires? plenty of skyscrapers and tall buildings have gone on fire, how come none fell? There are thousands of architects and engineers who have openly signed up to the fact that they don't believe it fell due to fire, where are the thousands who have signed up to say otherwise? A recent study poured doubt on previous investigations.

    I can produce mountains of the above, endlessly, and if you can't explain it to me (I can subjectively reject any of your explanations anyway) then you've "lost the debate" meaning it must have fallen due to a conspiracy I never have to explain. This is why truthers obsess over WTC 7.



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