There are a lot of things in the world that are open to question and further scrutiny. I don't necessarily believe every "official" story, although I don't blindly accept conspiracies just because a video may seem convincing. I think there is actually a good bit of damage that is being done to society through propaganda which is by design to weaken people's trust. But the beauty of that is that the government does a good enough job weakening our trust all by themself without any conspiracies. What I don't like is absolute certainty and people who are so confident in something when they don't really have adequate facts to substantiate sensational claims. To me that's a damaging thing. Like people who are willing to easily accept and believe horrific things about celebrities like they're sacrificing human life and other insane claims (they're reptiles/illuminati/etc). Like people are going to end up trying to kill these people eventually, if they really believe they're that evil. When we dehumanize people in such a dramatic way without the decency of giving them a chance to be proven innocent that's like executing people in court of public opinion... It isn't fair or right, and it is reckless and dangerous.
@brokensignal this is so well said. I spend a lot of time on Tik tok….u[you should see some of the very what you’re talking about goes on there. This should get best answer…excuse me though I have to call someone on my red phone now.
No. We landed on the moon, lizard people are not a thing, contrails are not a mind control spray, 9/11 was not a US government perpetrated event, and 5G does not cause cancer.
I leave the door open on JFK though…some weird stuff there, although I’m not yet convinced of any actual conspiracies.
The idea of 'conspiracy theory' is relative, and very much a function of the views of the person calling something a conspiracy theory. Whatever is not supported in one's mind, or belief or interests may look like conspiracy theory.