What relevant events occurred between 1918 (influenza pandemic) and 2019 (COVID-19) that could explain it?
— TheMadFool
The era of mass media, News Limited, the internet and some big political scandals like Watergate. Crackpots, the paranoid and the haters have a ready source of community and information all around the world in ways inconceivable in 1919. — Tom Storm
COVID-19 isn't the first pandemic the world has faced
— TheMadFool
(y) It seems though, that some don't learn from history.
There have been crazies all along for sure.
Some forms of vaccination were used a millennium ago in China, but it didn't really take off until much later, the 1800s then the 1900s in particular.
Religious and other anti-vaxxers have pretty much followed suit, as far as I can tell. — jorndoe
The answer to this seems to be that this pandemic isn’t really like the ones you mention and is more akin to the 1968 flu outbreak. No measures then of the sort we’ve seen this time around were implemented, presumably because they were seen as being out of proportion to the problem. People don’t like being confined to their homes or coerced into receiving medical treatments; so if the basis upon which these things are enforced seems questionable then it’s understandable if they become inclined to deny it fully. — AJJ
It's not just that. Think of old monocultures where there is a culture of "public secrets", ie. there are things that everybody knows (and talks about them in private with people whom one trusts), but in public, will never admit to them (and will consider it outrageous that anyone would think of them).That's why any old shit can be spun into a perfectly fine conspiracy. — Tom Storm
Certainly. It helps the ruling party to demoralize the population at large, because if they are demoralized, they won't rebel, and the ruling party will attain its goal -- to stay in power (and obtain more of it).It seems to me that foundations for paranoid thinking are partly built into some political frameworks. — Tom Storm
As things stand, I'm focusing on who the beneficiaries of the incident are.Actually not. — ssu
In this case, I don't think the group was artificially created, but that at some point, it could be that someone (a prospective beneficiary) infiltrated it and guided it to extremism.Start with finding people who have absolutely no connection and focusing on totally different aspects noting the conspiracy. Learn the history. Above all, real conspiracies do leave traces.
Then think it through yourself. Does Slovenian politics resort to such antics? Who would artificially create this pseudo-group?
Actually, the situation here in the past 20 years made me lose faith in the law of karma; or at least leads me to believe that karma, like God, loves rightwingers.Slovenia is a very small country. What goes around comes around.
It doesn't sound bizarre to me. For example, European rulers and upper classes have a long history of expressing contempt for the ordinary folk. The idea that it is the citizens who are wrong (and should be replaced), and not the government, can be heard at pretty much any election.In 1995, the GIA declared all Algerians to be takfir, or apostates.
The last sentence sounds absolutely bizarre, but it's true. Algerians weren't worthy of them!
Actually, "conspiracy" isn't the right concept. "Strategy", "divide and conquer". "PR stunt".Of course this is sidestepping the actual topic, but I'm trying to make the point that if there is really a conspiracy, then there will be real traces of it. Nonexistent events don't leave them.
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