I Do Not Spread Conspiracy Theories - I Report on Actual News
Confirming Conspiracy Theories When they Prove True is Fun
I published a few recent posts that could, at first sight, seem like I am inventing or spreading far-fetched conspiracy theories.
If you think so, I am extremely offended because I do nothing of the sort!
Consider this absurd and baseless right-wing conspiracy theory about blocking the sun, which I never reported on:
Blocking the sun? How nonsensical! The idea that our authorities would try to block the sun is obviously completely crazy.
Fact-checker Snopes explains why this ridiculous theory is false:
As previously detailed by Snopes, a fact-checking organization, the assertion is largely based on sensationalist reports about the scope and ability of the SCoPEx project.
That makes sense, right? Except… I was so surprised yesterday, when I read this news, two years after the Snopes debunking:
Okay, so now, blocking the Sun is good for you and is no longer a crazy right-wing conspiracy theory.
What I Do and Don’t
I never report on futuristic and speculative conspiracy theories. It is just not my schtick. I am perfectly fine with other people doing so. I enjoy reading about, and thinking about, such futuristic predictions like “they will try to block the sun”. I think about them when investing my money. I also remember them.
I find such speculation interesting — and I think a lot about the future also — but I prefer not to write about speculative conspiracy ideas online because some of them might not prove true and then I would be embarrassed.
What I do report is actual news about things that have already happened.
When Dr. Mike Yeadon and others sounded alarms in 2020 and 2021 that Covid vaccines would destroy fertility, I stayed out of that discussion. The reason was that their concerns seemed very interesting and plausible, but they were based on predictions that might or might not pan out. I did not report on such allegations, but I remembered them.
What I do instead, involves reporting on recent news or analyzing data representing events that already happened. When fertility dropped and deaths soared as predicted in heavily vaccinated countries this year, I reported on the facts that actually transpired — that happened to validate the earlier theory that Covid vaccine can cause depopulation.
I am very aware that “conspiracy theories”, that is, speculation about the future based on uncertain, but interesting thoughts, often prove true and sometimes prove false. When they prove true, or false, I write about them accurately. It makes for interesting, engaging, informative content — that is no longer a conspiracy “theory”, but instead merely a report on facts and recent news.
“Conspiracy Theory” is a False Label Used for Suppression
A typical person usually does not want to appear crazy or insane in the eyes of others. So, if a newspaper tells someone that “blocking out the sun” is a conspiracy theory, it instantly makes this topic uncomfortable for the average layperson. If that layperson happens to have liberal leanings, calling such theories “right-wing conspiracy theories” makes them especially unappealing. The press and fact-checkers are very aware of that and intentionally use such terminology to prevent people from looking into such things deeper.
Here’s a good example:
To anyone with at least five functioning brain cells, this is absurd. How can a question of fact and science — whether Sars-Cov-2 was engineered before originating near a Chinese bio lab — be a “right-wing conspiracy theory”?
Sars-Cov-2 is either lab-engineered, or it is of natural origin and came from cave bats who somehow inserted a Moderna-patented sequence into a virus in their cave and then flew 1,000 miles to Wuhan to spread it in the vicinity of Wuhan’s biolab. There is nothing right-wing about considering either possibility carefully.
Well, obviously many people who are told that only right-wing, Asian-phobic crazies would think about this question, react in an illogical way, and refuse to even consider this possibility — out of fear of being labeled “right-wing conspiracists”. That is the reason why the term “conspiracy theory” is so abused by the media.
The takeaway here is that if you see a well-orchestrated media and fact-checker campaign that the “theory of XXX is a right-wing conspiracy” — it is a good time to take note, take a look with an open mind, and remember that theory for the future.
Examples of Conspiracy Theories Proven True — Suggest Your Own!
(below is courtesy of El Gato that I underlined)
This article is getting near email limits, so…
Feel free to suggest your own examples in the comments (fact check vs confirmation via actual news later). I plan to grow this article.
Please post:
link to fact check or news article saying XXX is a conspiracy theory
link to later news article proving it true (NO substack or social media posts!)
Looking forward to your comments!
Igor, I love what you do; by exposing the truth, you are effectively throwing a giant monkey wrench into the narrative churning gears of the globalist mechanism. It is very entertaining especially when you have provided documents to back up what you claiming. I am always sharing this information as far as I can. I have managed to turn around several people I know; this resulted in them NOT vaccinating their kids, I may have save their lives in doing so.
I make it a point to talk to at least 5 people per day hoping to red pill them.
Being a "Conspiracy Theorist" is spending countless hours researching and gathering as much information as possible, only to have people who do nothing but watch TV like CNN for their info, call you crazy. These are the same people who thoughtlessly follow such social narratives as "safe and effective."
In order to "follow" anything, all you have to do is "not think for you're self," its just like dead fish, they just float down stream........ no wiggle, no resistance; easy prey and guaranteed enslavement.
There are no "Theorists" just people who are awake and paying attention.
Way over-engineered. Simplest way to block the sun (at least for a short time) is to eject Gates into it.