Question:
Origins of a Conspiracy?
jake
2007-04-05 17:43:28 UTC
Seems as if many are devided on issues of conspiracy theory. On the one hand you have a mass of simple minded people who see what is presented to them and question little inside the social constructs of society. Unless, that is, society deems a topic worthy of demonization, then everyone jumps aboard. On the other hand you have a group of critical thinkers who many feel due to "paranoia" look for the worst in things. Conspiracy theories arent accepted by the simple minded person because his world is simple and conspiracies only prove to complicate things further. For this same reason the critical mind can sometimes over look the simple nature of things in the hopes of explaining a more complex world. Somewhere between these two extremes exists truth.

Most of us have heard of many of the bigger conspiracies involving the Illuminati, New World Order, Bilderberg Group, 9/11, Jesuit Order and Freemasonry, to name a few.

Question is, what is the origin of this conspiracy if it exists?
Seven answers:
2007-04-05 17:47:54 UTC
It don't.
2007-04-06 00:56:13 UTC
I think your rather biased pontification is wrong on a number of points. First, you take the position that anyone who doesn't buy into the "conspiracy" theory is simple minded. Second, you take the position that those who do are "critical thinkers".



Thus, using your logic, anyone who doesn't believe that Elvis is alive is simple minded. And similarly, anyone who believes that Elvis is alive and well and living in Las Vegas, is a critical thinker.



Similarly, anyone who doesn't believe that the government has been hiding aliens in Area 51 is simple minded. And anyone who believes this fantasy is a critical thinker.



As to the origin of the 9/11 Conspiracy Fantasies? That is rather evident. It is a fantasy that has been embraced by very fearful and frightened individuals who can't deal with the reality of the 9/11 attacks.



It is much safer to seek to blame their own government than to deal with the reality that the last "super power" was successfully attacked by a rag-tag group of Islamic Militants. They can fight back against the former. With the latter, they are reduced to simply waiting for it to happen again.
cjvabch
2007-04-06 19:18:12 UTC
If your going to show up in the middle of the rodeo, your going to miss a few round ups!



April 14, 2004, I was lucky enough to be able to watch the 9-11 hearings live at this time, listening to testimony from all sides was damning.

"Surely even the most cynical among us believes that a betrayal of such magnitude must carry consequences. Without consequences, there is no justice for the dead and no safety for the living. Why has no one been held accountable?"



"Answers that don't answer,

Explanations that don't explain,

Conclusions that don't conclude."

"Everybody was at fault, so therefore no one was at fault?"
john b
2007-04-06 20:16:34 UTC
the guy above said...



"It is a fantasy that has been embraced by very fearful and frightened individuals who can't deal with the reality of the 9/11 attacks."



"It is much safer to seek to blame their own government than to deal with the reality that the last "super power" was successfully attacked by a rag-tag group of Islamic Militants."



Thats the dumbest thing ive ever heard, I dont even know if I want to take the time to respond to that one. Love how you make things so SIMPLE! :)



We are so afraid of the truth we just make crap up, is that about right? Your telling me im more afraid of a group of rag tag extremist hiding in a cave somewhere then a network of some of the worlds most powerful men planning WW3? I wonder how afraid you would be if you found out that the enemy your fighting is sleeping with the guard outside your door. You have no understanding of war and politics or the Ideology of the men who control them. Neither do you have any understanding of the conspiracy of which I speak.



Im going to answer the question above so that in the future you can atleast come up with a decent excuse for your ignorance.



Dr Carrol Quigley, Professor of History at Georgetown University (Bill Clintons history teacher)has this to say about the conspiracy.



"There does exist, and has existed for a generation, an international Anglophile network which operates, to some extent, in the way the radical Right believes the Communists act. In Fact, this network, which we may identity as the Round Table Groups, has no aversion to cooperating with the Communists, or any group, and frequently does so."



"I know of the operations of this network because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two years, in the early 1960's, to examine its papers and secret records." Dr. Carroll Quigley, a professor of History at Georgetown University's Foreign Service School, author of Tragedy & Hope.



"The powers of financial capitalism had (a) far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences."



This network of men all belong to secret societies that link themselves through bloodlines of noble families which date all the way back to the mystery schools of babylon and egypt. We call them the black nobility or as some know them the Illuminati. Mystery Babylon ring a bell?



The Ideology of these schools is one of illumination or enlightenment. Some scholars believe that the mystery schools of Babylon were adopted by Egyptian culture and then by Greece, Rome and even spread into eastern countries. A list of some of these schools is as follows. Schools of Isis, Astarte, Baccus, Dionysus, Mithras, Pythagorean, ect. It is from the progression of these schools that some scholars believe the Masons of britain received their knowledge, or from the druids in and around the areas of Scottland. From the Knights Templars and Masons to the Rosticrucians, Illuminati, Theosophy, Jesuit Order, Skull and Bones groups ect.



In most cases the light that illuminated these groups was known only to the elect, they called it Lucifer, son of the morning. The schools of Antiquity knew him as a she and in many cases Venus, the morning star was worshiped as Astarte, Ishtar, Aphrodite ect. Most of the people that make up this network havent yet learned that the light they reach for is that of Lucifer. This is a secret only the elect know.



What binds this network of men together is an Ideology very old. They create and use organizations to further their influence and ultimatly gain full control. War is a tool used by them and in most cases the men they work with are puppets that dont mind a few strings as long as they get rich.



Adam Weishaupt, Professor of Canon law at the University of Ingolstadt, stated that if their plans were to be discovered that just as a shark can never catch the entire school of fish, so too the Illuminati would break up into many smaller organizations.



You will have world government soon and its going to be brought about in a way that your freedoms are given over willfully. Even then you will not understand what is going on because you have no eyes to see with.



btw elvis is dead.
2007-04-06 00:50:45 UTC
The origins go back to the medieval Kings. Don't think such power and wealth has been lost.
2007-04-06 01:55:13 UTC
Listen from the horse's mouth, the guy who got killed over his desire to expose the "conspiracies"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlEqtaWpKEU

Lest we are to believe JFK was a "paranoid tin foil conspiracy theorist" we have to wonder why he got killed shortly after having spoken these words.
2007-04-06 00:49:00 UTC
it orginated in a basement at some guy who's 40 house still living with his parents...


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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