Anonymous ID: 3b59fc Nov. 4, 2018, 2:55 p.m. No.3732195   🗄️.is đź”—kun

CONSPIRACY THEORY

This is such a bogus, propaganda-drenched concepts anons. It is presented as if it is some special category of thought that is inherently invalid. But this is a game, and a ridiculous one.

 

Looking on the wikipedia page for the term, I noticed a lot of citations of one author in particular. Here is a pdf of his book "A Culture of Conspiracy". Well worth looking at to learn how the mainstream delusion is woven.

 

Knowing what we know about Alex Jones and his whole ecosystem of pseudo-conspiracism, it is no suprise that Jones makes his appearance at the beginning, and it is very very easy to understand what "Richard McCaslin" is. The brand of fuckery is now very familiar. Notice the over the top armaments on McCaslin. These people are stupid.

 

http://www.lapidjudaism.com/uploads/8/1/0/5/8105580/barkun_michael_-_a_culture_of_conspiracy.pdf

 

  1. The Nature of Conspiracy Belief

On January 20, 2002, Richard McCaslin, thirty-seven, of Carson City, Nevada, was arrested sneaking

into the Bohemian Grove in Northern California. The Grove is the site of an exclusive annual men's

retreat attended by powerful business and political leaders. When McCaslin was discovered, he was

carrying a combination shotgun–assault rifle, a. 45-caliber pistol, a crossbow, a knife, a sword, and a

bomb-launching device. He said he was acting alone.

McCaslin told police he had entered the Bohemian Grove in order to expose the satanic human

sacrifices he believed occurred there. He fully expected to meet resistance and to kill people in the

process. He had developed his belief in the Grove's human sacrifices based on the claims of a radio

personality, Alex Jones, whose broadcasts and Web site present alleged evidence of ritual killings

there. Similar charges against the Bohemian Grove—along with allegations of blood drinking and

sexual perversions—have been spread for several years on the Web and in fringe publications, some of

which also suggest that the Grove's guests include nonhuman species masquerading as human beings.

These and similar tales would be cause for little more than amusement were it not for individuals like

McCaslin, who take them seriously enough to risk killing and being killed.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_McCaslin

 

His story appears in the 2013 book, "Heroes in the Night; Inside the Real Life Superhero Movement" by Tea Krulos.[7] He also has three Phantom Patriot videos on YouTube.