My Tin Foil Hats
The final installment of X's interview. Enjoy...
What’s your favorite conspiracy theory, and why?
Sheesh, I could have written an entire dissertation on this question alone. When most people think of conspiracy buffs they picture a paunchy, middle aged guy wearing a tin foil hat while sitting in the basement of his parents’ house. This may be true in some cases but most conspiracy theorists I’ve come into contact with are actually highly intellectual people who see something amiss and dig deeper. Or as my boss would put it “give it the smell test”. If it doesn’t smell right it probably isn’t. Talk to a conspiracy buff and you’ll find someone who knows more about history than just what was taught in your high school or college textbooks. But, I digress, on with the answer…There are actually 2 that I try follow on a somewhat regular basis.
JFK assassination – There are a million and one conspiracy theories about this assassination. What keeps me interested in this topic is that too many things don’t add up. How does a guy with U.S. military training defect to the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War then return to the U.S. to re-claim his citizenship with not so much as a peep from the government? How does a guy who, according to which account you believe, couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn with a bulldozer fire 3 shots in 15 seconds and manage to blow out the brains of the sitting American President? Before he can be tried, or for that matter properly interrogated, he himself is killed in front of the entire Dallas police department by a supposed vigilante. As of yet, no one has accounted for how the third man was shot in Dealey Plaza, especially since he was nowhere near the motorcade (well, except for him…he compiled his own conspiracy theory and had it published). And where the hell is Kennedy’s brain? In April 1968, civil rights activist Martin Luther King was assassinated, again by a supposed lone, crazed gunman. In June 1968, JFK’s brother and then presidential candidate Robert Kennedy was assassinated by yet another lone, crazed gunman. Apparently in the ‘60s it was very vogue to be a lone, crazed gunman. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Add the assassination of South Korean leader and U.S. puppet Diem twenty days prior to the JFK assassination and Kennedy's limited withdrawal of troops from the war in the weeks leading up to his assassination.
And what about Vietnam? Kennedy was searching for a way to get the hell out - quickly. In less than a year after the assassination, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution based on 2 reports of unfriendly fire on U.S. destroyers. The second of these incidents, the attack on the USS Turner, was deemed to have been a fabrication according to a 2005 NSA report (similar to the whole WMD debacle). The Resolution effectively gave then President Johnson free reign in SE Asia. My opinion is that the whole thing stinks worse than week old fish. Someone was desperate to stay in Vietnam…the question is, why?
The second conspiracy theory that has recently caught my attention is probably going to gain me permanent membership in the tin foil hat club but here it goes. Originally it started as a quest to gain more information about the Nag Hammadi Library (aka Dead Sea Scrolls) after my curiosity was piqued by the movie Stigmata and then piqued again by The DaVinci Code. I was raised Presbyterian which means that I was taught to interpret the stories of the Christian Bible as fables rather than historical fact with the exception of a few, namely the birth as well as the crucifixion and subsequent resurrection. In reading the Scrolls and the subsequent research, I came across statements that the crucifixion of Jesus was faked. Actually one of the Gospels found at Nag Hammadi explains how the crucifixion was faked and contains some rather snarky comments from Jesus about how He fooled the Romans. Further research revealed a supposed burial site in India.
Is there any truth to this? Some, but I haven’t had much time to properly research this theory yet. If true, it could be the biggest conspiracy in history. Why does it appeal to me? To tell the truth, the mere idea of something being false that I've been taught to believe for so long drives me to flesh this out. I need to be able to say that I checked it out and either I believe it to be possible or I don't. When you boil it all down, that need is what drives any researcher.
Thanks to my dear friend, X, for dragging me kicking and screaming back into the blogosphere.
What’s your favorite conspiracy theory, and why?
Sheesh, I could have written an entire dissertation on this question alone. When most people think of conspiracy buffs they picture a paunchy, middle aged guy wearing a tin foil hat while sitting in the basement of his parents’ house. This may be true in some cases but most conspiracy theorists I’ve come into contact with are actually highly intellectual people who see something amiss and dig deeper. Or as my boss would put it “give it the smell test”. If it doesn’t smell right it probably isn’t. Talk to a conspiracy buff and you’ll find someone who knows more about history than just what was taught in your high school or college textbooks. But, I digress, on with the answer…There are actually 2 that I try follow on a somewhat regular basis.
JFK assassination – There are a million and one conspiracy theories about this assassination. What keeps me interested in this topic is that too many things don’t add up. How does a guy with U.S. military training defect to the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War then return to the U.S. to re-claim his citizenship with not so much as a peep from the government? How does a guy who, according to which account you believe, couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn with a bulldozer fire 3 shots in 15 seconds and manage to blow out the brains of the sitting American President? Before he can be tried, or for that matter properly interrogated, he himself is killed in front of the entire Dallas police department by a supposed vigilante. As of yet, no one has accounted for how the third man was shot in Dealey Plaza, especially since he was nowhere near the motorcade (well, except for him…he compiled his own conspiracy theory and had it published). And where the hell is Kennedy’s brain? In April 1968, civil rights activist Martin Luther King was assassinated, again by a supposed lone, crazed gunman. In June 1968, JFK’s brother and then presidential candidate Robert Kennedy was assassinated by yet another lone, crazed gunman. Apparently in the ‘60s it was very vogue to be a lone, crazed gunman. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Add the assassination of South Korean leader and U.S. puppet Diem twenty days prior to the JFK assassination and Kennedy's limited withdrawal of troops from the war in the weeks leading up to his assassination.
And what about Vietnam? Kennedy was searching for a way to get the hell out - quickly. In less than a year after the assassination, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution based on 2 reports of unfriendly fire on U.S. destroyers. The second of these incidents, the attack on the USS Turner, was deemed to have been a fabrication according to a 2005 NSA report (similar to the whole WMD debacle). The Resolution effectively gave then President Johnson free reign in SE Asia. My opinion is that the whole thing stinks worse than week old fish. Someone was desperate to stay in Vietnam…the question is, why?
The second conspiracy theory that has recently caught my attention is probably going to gain me permanent membership in the tin foil hat club but here it goes. Originally it started as a quest to gain more information about the Nag Hammadi Library (aka Dead Sea Scrolls) after my curiosity was piqued by the movie Stigmata and then piqued again by The DaVinci Code. I was raised Presbyterian which means that I was taught to interpret the stories of the Christian Bible as fables rather than historical fact with the exception of a few, namely the birth as well as the crucifixion and subsequent resurrection. In reading the Scrolls and the subsequent research, I came across statements that the crucifixion of Jesus was faked. Actually one of the Gospels found at Nag Hammadi explains how the crucifixion was faked and contains some rather snarky comments from Jesus about how He fooled the Romans. Further research revealed a supposed burial site in India.
Is there any truth to this? Some, but I haven’t had much time to properly research this theory yet. If true, it could be the biggest conspiracy in history. Why does it appeal to me? To tell the truth, the mere idea of something being false that I've been taught to believe for so long drives me to flesh this out. I need to be able to say that I checked it out and either I believe it to be possible or I don't. When you boil it all down, that need is what drives any researcher.
Thanks to my dear friend, X, for dragging me kicking and screaming back into the blogosphere.
11 Comments:
1) uh' oh..am first here...get shy when I'm first.
2) read your comment back to my comment down there about "Prince Charming"...we just had a fight so right now he's pretty much a toad.
3) I hope you continue on that research. I was thinking about JC awhile ago and how a lot of my views have changed over the past couple of years....
4) interesting everything you said here..
I too have always thought that there was something "fishy" about the Kennedy assassination but any theory that comes out of that dribble "The Divinci Code" I don't even want to listen to... It was a proven fact that he fabricated some of his "evidence" himself....
I do believe that the "church" probably covered up a lot of stuff but "The Divinci Code is nonsense....
For many, the JFK assassination becomes a lynchpin because the forensic and eyewitness evidence screams against the "lone-nut" conclusion. The evidence excluding Oswald as the TSBD shooter is enormous. The evidence of official coverup is just as overwhelming (altered witnessed testimony, forged signatures on affidavits, etc.).
Because there is so much evidence that points toward a conspiracy, then that's a pretty good place to start a discussion about conspiracy. After all, depending on the national mood, 66-81% of your countrymen will agree with you in general, and the most of the people who disagree with you or are undecided will still take you seriously.
The belief in Oswald as lone-nut assassin rests only in the repetition of the allegation by people who bear the signifiers of honesty and authority (Judge Warren, Peter Jennings, Gerald Posner, and lately Vincent Bugliosi).
The second line isn't important to me insofar as what truths it might uncover, but rather the history of belief that it spawned. Separating fact from fiction on that issue is a monumental task, but it actually goes a long way in understanding why certain groups hold their esoterica so dear to them. To put it another way, I don't have to believe that Sun Yung Moon is Christ in order to know that thousands upon thousands of people believe that he is.
Luxie -
(1) It's ok. I'm an introvert at heart too.
(2) lol. You'd think evolution would have fixed that problem by now. It's just not fair that they can switch back and forth from Prince Charming to toad so quickly.
(3) I'm hoping I can squeeze some research in weekly. My views have changed as well as I've gotten older.
Thanks for stopping by!
Gary - I think most people view the Kennedy assassination as fishy. Especially in light of some of the things the government has confessed to doing that most would have never dreamed possible (MK Ultra comes to mind).
As for Mr. Brown, I don't think he addressed this particular issue in the book. While he did state that some of the things in the book were "fact" when they in fact, weren't I think you have to take the book at face value. It's fiction, not a research document.
I wouldn't necessarily agree that all the theories expressed in the book are nonsense. Brown relied heavily on another well-researched book Holy Blood, Holy Grail which, frankly, opens up many cans-o-worms about the relationship between Mary Magdalene and Jesus. I highly recommend the book if anyone would like to delve into the topic. I realize it's a topic that strikes an unpleasant chord in some. My personal belief is that if Jesus was married, had kids, etc. it still doesn't change the teachings. Just my personal belief. Dissenting viewpoints are welcome.
X - I think I view the Kennedy assassination as the turning point in American society where people started to really question the government and its ethics. Maybe that's why so many remain interested after all these years.
I'm already working on my next fiendish plot to get you to post again.
X - *gulp*
Pssst...I gotta send you an invite (had to make my blog private due to work issues).
E-mail me and I'll shoot you an invite! My address is mrssswitch@embarqmail.com
Thanks...;)
x.dell - keep working on her... whatever it takes to get her out here with us again!!
Happy Valentine's day
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Muslims believe this.
Muslims accept the virgin birth AND, believe it or not, the Ascension.
They don't believe that Jesus died and rose again, they believe a substitute was crucified.
Marilyn Monroe's death is my favorite conspiracy.
Maybe old hat, but still ........
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