The Truth About ‘Conspiracy Theories’
By Roosh V.
If you’ve ever used the phrase “conspiracy theory” to brush off an idea, the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States nods, because it was them who deliberately popularized [i.e. weaponised] the term to mean “paranoid” and “crazy.”
All Americans born after the 1960s, and slowly then the rest of the world, have been installed with a mental stop program whenever an idea is proposed that suggests planning or coordination by those who are stronger than them.
In other words, you have been programmed not to think at all about the plans or agenda of the globalists who own most of the world’s wealth. Unless you have broken free from this programming, your brain simply won’t allow it.
This is what people have done since time immemorial: They meet, talk about the problems they face, and then discuss solutions to solve them. They network with one another, find common ground, and exchange favors. And yet the second you propose that men of the most upper classes meet in such a manner, it’s a “conspiracy theory.”
Since people from many neighborhoods are meeting and sharing ideas on how to change the world, you better believe that the richest 10,000 men are doing so as well. In fact, not only do they meet casually throughout the year, they also have huge yearly summits with names like Bilderberg, Trilateral Commission, World Economic Forum, Bohemian Club, and Club of Rome.
They also spend billions of dollars to create hundreds of non-profit organizations, think tanks, and political action committees that incubate their ideas and spread them further with the aim of affecting world policy and mainstream thought, a job made easier for them since they own all major media outlets.
Do you think you are allowed to see what goes on in their meetings? Of course not.
This is how groups work. Just because you don’t see planning with your own eyes doesn’t mean it’s not taking place.
You may be thinking that I’m stating the obvious of group functions, but when an idea backed by evidence is proposed showing that certain groups — through basic coordination — are pushing barely elaborate programs onto society, it’s a “conspiracy theory” that must not be thought of.
It’s no coincidence that people only use that phrase when it’s a plan by elite groups, not by groups with little power.
No one is going to call my actions a conspiracy because I’m just a small fish, but the minute someone like Bill Gates claims he wants to reduce the world population by billions through “vaccines, health care, and reproductive health services,” it’s suddenly a conspiracy theory to label his efforts as “depopulation,” even though it came from his own mouth.
All hypotheses are either fiction or fact. If the idea does not have enough evidence then it cannot be considered fact.
The problem with “conspiracy theory” is it closes people off to even considering the evidence. History shows that the elite of the United States have executed crazy plans to further their own interests, and they are certainly even more capable of doing it now when it comes to controlling both the behavior and minds of the population, solely to increase their wealth and power.
The only question is through what specific plans they have and through which mechanisms.
If we can understand those plans then we can better devise countermeasures to stop them, but this will take a clear-headed mind that carefully examines sound evidence on hand, instead of immediately brushing off the fact that those in power come up with plans just like we do.
The only difference between us and them is that they can make their plans come to fruition due to the immense power they have within all American institutions, including law enforcement, military, spy organizations, media, universities, NGOs, and so on.
yogaesoteric
October 2, 2019