Francis Yates’ scholarly work on him is pretty interesting if you’re interested in this area. — I like sushi
This is the problem typically with conspiracy theories. Everything that happens has to have been planned by someone, who basically is against the "ordinary" people. It has to be the Jews, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, the Globalists, the Communists, the Cultural Marxists, the liberals, whoever acting as the instigators and following their hideous sinister plans.since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that. — Pfhorrest
↪h060tu Not sure what you mean, but I said "blamed" because crazy conspiracy people think that everything that has happened to weaken the church and state since the 18th century is the fault of the Illuminati, despite them not having existed for anything but a tiny sliver of that time. But hey, their agenda continued anyway, Enlightenment spread across the world, so I guess in the eyes of paranoid religious freaks, the Illuminati must have secretly continued in the shadows pulling the strings on all the world leaders ever since their supposed "destruction", since there's no way crazy ideas like critical thinking and freedom could have caught on without some kind of nefarious agenda like that. — Pfhorrest
This is the problem typically with conspiracy theories. Everything that happens has to have been planned by someone, who basically is against the "ordinary" people. It has to be the Jews, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, the Globalists, the Communists, the Cultural Marxists, the liberals, whoever acting as the instigators and following their hideous sinister plans.
The idea that large changes can happen without someone having planned them is far too difficult to understand. — ssu
And what you have to use is source criticism. There are indeed conspiracies, and then there are those that aren't. And one has to understand which are true and which are not. Yet everything isn't planned and few things are conspiracies. The leaders are quite clueless about the future.Uh, except there are literally documents which show that there are things that are planned. — h060tu
Taken literally what you said above, doesn't make sense at all. Really, to kill the Guatemalan population? Like Hitler with his "final solution" with the Jews? Likely that wasn't your intent, but this is what source criticism is like. That the civil war in Guatemala was the longest in Latin America 1960-1996 and about two hundred thousand died wasn't the intent. This is the typical error that conspiracy theorists make: the agenda of someone is inherently evil, totally diabolical. It's not just a bad policy or immoral and unethical, it is genuinely evil. This passionate stance destroys objectivity. You really have to make a credible argument that someone really planned to have a civil war going on for 36 years and the objective was genocide. Because otherwise the normal history of Guatemala holds: that the United Fruit Company, the largest landowner in Guatemala, protested that the government of Guatemala began expropriating unused Company land to landless peasants, lobbied and then got the CIA to orchestrate a military coup that lead to a long civil war. That the United Fruit company wanted to change the demographics of Guatemala like Hitler wanted with Europe sounds very peculiar.For example, the 1954 coup in Guatemala was planned to destroy the government, and kill the population to protect US crop interests. — h060tu
Taken literally what you said above, doesn't make sense at all. Really, to kill the Guatemalan population? Like Hitler with his "final solution" with the Jews? Likely that wasn't your intent, but this is what source criticism is like. That the civil war in Guatemala was the longest in Latin America 1960-1996 and about two hundred thousand died wasn't the intent. — ssu
This is the typical error that conspiracy theorists make: the agenda of someone is inherently evil, totally diabolical. — ssu
That the United Fruit company wanted to change the demographics of Guatemala like Hitler wanted with Europe sounds very peculiar. — ssu
In a way conspiracy theorists go a notch further than let's say Noam Chomsky, an archetypal long term critic of the US establishment who sees as his role to criticize the US in every aspect. In fact there's a surprising equivalence between Noam Chomsky and Alex Jones. A lot of the points are the same, which are facts. But then there's the difference. Chomsky doesn't see 9/11 as an "inside job", doesn't see that the Illuminati want to decrease the population by all the bad things happening in the World. Chomsky might see as the only good thing that the US funded and AIDS program under Bush (or similar events), but typically real conspiracy theorists don't see anything good. Except Trump when it comes to Alex Jones. — ssu
You make my case.Yes it was. That was the intent. Just like Madeline Albreight admitted, on tape, that a few hundred thousand if not a million Iraqis dying was a "sacrifice she was willing to make" or something to that effect. Yes, they knew what would happen if they installed a murderous dictator and directed him to kill the population. They knew, and they thought the sacrifice worth the action. — h060tu
First, it's Madeleine Albright. Second, the quote you refer Albright saying was about UN Sanctions, which were put on after the Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. Later Albright was against the invasion of Iraq, — ssu
Later Albright was against the invasion of Iraq, so what has that do to with Guatemala, really? — ssu
And thirdly, how about that the Carter administration barred all sales of military equipment to Guatemala and later extended the ban to commercial sales because of the atrocities? — ssu
Or, when you say that the intent was to kill the Guatemalan people, who would then pick the Banana's? — ssu
What I earlier forgot to mention is also the omnipotence that conspiracy theorists give to the elites, the Illuminati and/or the US. — ssu
Actually, I did understand that likely you didn't intend to saying that United Fruit / the US wanted to kill ALL Guatemalans, but saying that the "intent was to kill the Guatemalan people" can interpreted literally. That the Guatemalan junta wanted to kill all leftist rebels, their sympathizers and anyone helping them is a better way to put it. When in an insurgency the government response is unrestrained violence, the outcome can indeed be something approaching a genocide. But the intent then isn't genuine genocide of "lets eradicate all the people of this ethnicity/religion/class and we have solved our problem". There are examples of those genocides: the Holocaust, the Holodomor, the genocide against Armenians, Cambodia, Rwanda etc.You're either not understanding what I'm saying, not reading, or not caring. — h060tu
And that's a great start, which I agree with.I didn't say that there weren't different visions within the Oligarchic structure. There are. Wilsonianism is one of those. - I always say that there are different factions, sects and interest groups within the superstructure of the Oligarchy which do different things and want different things — h060tu
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