They learned this from Hitler's Nazi movement, and from the Communist terror propagation. Except in America everyone buys the lies. This is because the powers that be suppressed education. The communists' biggest mistake was to teach science and literature and art to their young. Consequently, every citizen saw right through their lies.
I have news for you: the American establishment lies are almost identical to those of the communists. The difference? Amys believe them. Russkies did not. — god must be atheist
We got the Super Bowl and Twinkies, right? — Noah Te Stroete
NO, no. My conspiracy theory is in the news. Yours is behind the headlines. Mine are in the li(n)es. Yours are in-between.
Which are more likely to be true?
"When two conspiracists lock antlers." — god must be atheist
I just don't buy it came down from the scattered and not very large fires. — Coben
And besides, ExxonMobil profits never helped anyone I've ever met. Oil is sold on the world markets and the prices are the same for you, me, and everyone else I've ever met no matter if ExxonMobil owns it or not. I don't give a fuck about ExxonMobil. They are fucking the vast majority of Americans. — Noah Te Stroete
But, hey! We got the Super Bowl and Twinkies, right? — Noah Te Stroete
The federal government requires television networks to beam free NFL football games into my living room in HD. That's the kind of authoritarianism I can get behind. — fishfry
Furthermore, you’re a psychopathic asshole. — Noah Te Stroete
Perhaps you will not consider this evidence, but give it a watch and see if it shifts how you approach the issue and how you go about looking for evidence.I've seen no good evidence that there have been aliens and alien spacecraft recovered and/or captured by US governmental agencies. — creativesoul
I don't think that's it. Sure, conspiracies occur, but "conspiracy theories" have a bad name because many people have a tendency to jump rashly to the conclusion that a conspiracy has occurred. Conspiracies are complex, and therefore there should be a considerable epistemic hurdle to justify belief in one. O.J. Simpson's attorney's proposed to his jury that the LAPD conspired to frame him. Of course it's possible, but consider how many people would have to be in on it and that 100% of them would have to keep it secret. Good epistemology calls for finding the simplest solution to a set of facts, and since conspiracies are complex - it's rare that a conspiracy would be the simplest solution.Psychologically it can be understood why most people do not want to consider conspiracy theories seriously: because they do not want to believe that individuals more powerful than them are working against their interests. — leo
some people unjustifiably believe the world (or the rich) are out to get them. When examined more closely, that rarely seems to be the case. — Relativist
↪creativesoul The reactor could be on or off, which he explained. Your reaction to him is he is making this stuff up? — Coben
The reactor could be on or off, which he explained. Your reaction to him is he is making this stuff up? — Coben
Let's look at your approach. You don't watch the video. You decide, based presumably on your knowledge of current physics models and current technology that this technology is impossible and that the speaker has no credibility. You conclude that the person has no physics knowledge. The technology in question, should it actually exist, would be more advanced then ours and based most likely on processes we don't currently understand. Just as within science, if we go back 150 years, say, many things we now know not only to be possible and some existent, were ruled out based on then current knowledge. This in relation to findings and processes discovered or proposed by other scientists. So, your approach to reaching a conclusion that this person knows no physics was to not actually listen to them speak and assume that you can rule out any significant possible technological advances that might seem to be ruled out now by current science.I haven't watched the movie, but "Creating gravitational waves" with a reactor sounds fishy. Force of gravity is a funcion of mass and distance. In the classical physics sense. Neither can be faked. If someone claims to be generating "gravitational waves" with a reactor, methinks he is blowing it from the hothole. In other words, his or her credibility is gone. Because the person obviously has no physics knowledge, yet tries to use physics, false and impossible physics, to prove his or her point. — god must be atheist
Another point is the convoluted serving of the topic. They don't have a point; they try to pull the wool over the viewers' eyes by presenting their own self-contradictory facts so far away from each other in time and in topic line, that they hope nobody notices it. If they had a clear case, believe me, they would present it clearly. If they don't have a clear case, their (the conspiracy theorists') only hope is to not be noticed for that, and the only way to do that is to convolute their presentation. — god must be atheist
I thought this was fascinating. Your hypotheses, including knowing what is going on in other minds (motivations, hopes....) is applicaple to the person in the film you haven't seen.These are not criticism of the theory of conspiracy in the film, these are general observations also applicable to the film — god must be atheist
The technology in question, should it actually exist, would be more advanced then ours and based most likely on processes we don't currently understand. — Coben
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