Trust No One?

Transcription

Trust No One?
Trust No One?
Conspiracy Theories in American History
Dr. Markus Hünemörder, LMU München
What are Conspiracy Theories?
no generally accepted definition
conspiracy theories are unofficial,
alternative narratives that blame
secret manipulators for bringing
about terrible events or
oppressive power structures
problem: how to differentiate
between CTs, actual conspiracies,
covert ops?
Watergate: a “conspiracy theory”
that became accepted truth
the term “conspiracy theory” is
negative and implies a certain
bizarreness
CTs implicitly assume that it is
deliberate human intentions and
actions that shape history
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Bob Woodward und Carl Bernstein, the investigative
journalists who uncovered the Watergate affair
were considered conspiracy theorists at one time
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Some American Conspiracy Theories
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The Illuminati Scare
the French Revolution degenerated
into the reign of terror and mass
guillotine executions
French clergyman Abbé Barruel and
Scottish author John Robison
independently claimed that radical
Freemasons, esp. the Bavarian
Illuminati, had deliberately planned
and engineered this
1798-99: conservative American
clergymen warned that Jefferson’s
Democratic-Republican party was
planning a similar reign of terror in
the United States
original modern conspiracy theory,
pattern persists to present day:
insidious secret societies secretly
manipulating history and controlling
world events
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the reverse side of the Great Seal of the United
States was not associated with the Illuminati or
the Freemasons until the early 20th century
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Anti-Masonry
in Sept. 1826, the renegade
freemason William Morgan
vanished without a trace after
threatening to expose the
secret society’s rituals
beginning of massive criticism
against freemasonry as elitist,
secret, unlawful, godless, antidemocratic, cruel, murderous
and nearly all-powerful
1828 Anti-Masonic Party
founded. Anti-elitist ideology,
opposed to freemasons in
public office
anti-freemason CTs still persist
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a symbol of the Freemasons
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The Kennedy Assassination
Nov. 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas
Lee Harvey Oswald was killed
two days later by Jack Ruby
a large majority (60-80
percent) of Americans believes
that Oswald did not act alone,
that JFK was the victim of a
conspiracy
common suspects: Mafia, CIA,
military-industrial complex,
Fidel Castro, KGB, Lyndon B.
Johnson, and even JFK himself
birthplace of modern
conspiracy theories
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Kennedy shortly before his death
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The Zapruder Film
The Zapruder film is a
motion picture sequence
shot by private citizen
Abraham Zapruder with a
home-movie camera,
unexpectedly capturing the
President's assassination.
While some conspiracy
theorists doubt the film’s
authenticity, others see it as
evidence that there was
more than one shooter.
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Watchmen (2009)
In this dark super hero
movie, JFK’s assassin is
finally revealed. The film
copies the Zapruder film
but keeps on going to show
that the Comedian, a super
hero working for the CIA,
shot the president.
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The Moon Landing
various conspiracy
theories claim that the
manned moon landings of
1969-1972 were faked
they point to seeming
inaccuracies in the
photographic evidence
according to the CTs,
NASA faked the moon
landings to “win” the
space race against the
Soviet Union
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a photo of the first moon landing;
note the non-parallel shadows and the flag
seemingly moved by wind
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The Roswell Mythology
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1947: reports about the crash of a
flying object in Roswell, NM
military cover-up: implausible
claims of a weather balloon
most likely, nothing happened, but
the military covered it up anyway!
close to Los Alamos, Alamogordo
and the Trinity nuclear site
in the 1970s, after Watergate, the
moon landing, and “2001: A Space
Odyssey”, more UFO reports
rich mythology about Roswell,
Area 51, Men in Black, etc.
streetlight in Roswell, New Mexico
around Christmas time
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The New World Order
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anti-internationalist, anti-elitist CT
mostly on the political right
fear of a conspiracy to erect a world
government and dismantle the United
States
many organizations are claimed to be
part of the conspiracy:
United Nations, black helicopters,
European Union, Federal Reserve
Bank, World Bank IMF, (Jewish)
international bankers, Bilderberger
Group, Illuminati and Freemasons
in many cases, strong biblical endtimes prophecy elements, associating
the New World Order with the
Antichrist
the New World Order CT may have
inspired Timothy McVeigh to bomb
the federal building in Oklahoma City
in 1995
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Pat Robertson, a leader of the Christian Right,
published a comprehensive version of the New
World Order CT in 1990
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The 9/11 Truth Movement
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diverse, widespread movement of
doubting the official explanation for
Sept. 11, 2001 events. “truthers”
L.I.H.O.P. and M.I.H.O.P. versions
some claim that WTC collapsed due to
a planned demolition, not plane
crashes
controversy about WTC 7
some claim that Pentagon was not hit
by a plane but a missile
e.g. David Ray Griffin, philosopher;
Steven E. Jones, physicist
“Loose Change” movie
rejection of 9/11 commission report
and NIST report
some polls indicate that 36 percent of
Americans doubt official explanations
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skepticism about the official explanations for
9/11 can be found across the sociological and
professional spectrum
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The Collapse of WTC7
WTC7, a smaller skyscraper
next to the twin towers,
collapsed without being
struck by an airplane.
Officials reports claim that
burning debris started a fire
that eventually brought the
building down.
Critics point to videos such
as this to claim that WTC7
fell to a deliberate
demolition instead.
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“Birthers”
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conspiracy theories about Barack
Obama’s citizenship
US president has to be “natural
born citizen” of the United States
claims that Obama was either not
born in Hawaii, or that he was not
a natural born citizen due to
Kenyan dual citizenship or
becoming an Indonesian citizen
“birthers” don’t accept the birth
certificate presented by Obama’s
campaign as evidence
racist element to the accusations
irony: McCain was born in Panama
“birthers” erroneously claim that this certification of live
birth is only a “short form” or a forgery and demand that
Obama release his “original” certificate, which is held by the
state of Hawaii
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Important Aspects
of Conspiracy Theories
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Repeating Patterns
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CTs are hardly new, reaching back
at least to the 18th century
narrative patterns often repeat
within several decades
Illuminati, Freemason and New
World Order CTs are very similar
parallels between 9/11 truth
movement and Peal Harbor CT
CTs about the assassinations of
JFK, his brother Robert, and
Martin Luther King mirror each
other
basically, CTs copy ideas from
older “relatives”
interestingly, “parallel” CTs can
come from opposed political
camps
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attack on Pearl Harbor, 1941
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Higher “Paranoid” Scholarship
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conspiracy theorists
meticulously document their
theses and evidence, similar to
conventional scientific
publications
arguments are typically sound,
until a conspiratorial “leap”
digresses from more
commonly accepted
interpretations
parallel discourse in books,
films, even conferences
sometimes even parallel
tourism / museums: Dallas,
Texas and Roswell, New Mexico
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there is an entire industry of books and films
offering alternative explanations of 9/11
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Conspiracy Theories and Proof
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it is nearly impossible to
“disprove” CTs with evidence
or lack thereof
logical structure and
meticulously compiled
evidence back up CTs
evidence to the contrary may
be fake; lack of evidence may
be work of the conspirators
CTs may only be refuted by
external arguments, if at all:
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inhuman efficiency of the
conspirators
problem of maintaining
necessary secrecy in an age of
talk shows
staging a fake moon landing would have
involved many witnesses, probably including
Soviet spies
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Explaining Conspiracy Theories
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Social Conflicts
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CTs may be “mobilized into
action chiefly by social conflicts
that involve ultimate schemes
of values and that bring
fundamental fears and
hatreds, rather than negotiable
interests, into political action”
in this interpretation, CTs are
primarily the refuge of those
who feel shut out of, or do not
believe in, the regular political
process of compromise and
majority rule
CTs as a phenomenon of the
political fringes – but can this
explain everything?
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Richard Hofstadter’s notion of a “paranoid style in
American politics” was the earliest comprehensive
explanation of the CT phenomenon
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Lies, Secrets, and Intelligence
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CTs draw on the culture of
government secrecy and power
during the Cold War
establishment and mythology of
powerful intelligence services
real covert ops and conspiracies
like Watergate or the Iran-Contra
affair
the plausible and the “paranoid”
are increasingly difficult to tell
apart
the mystique of intelligence
services makes it easy to
overestimate the inefficiency of
government, military, and
intelligence organizations
for all its power, the CIA is basically one huge,
often inefficient bureaucracy
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Too Much Information
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CTs do arise from a lack of
evidence, but an over-abundance
of information
especially evident with JFK and
9/11 CTs
excess of facts, documents, and
expert opinions with no consensus
on how to evaluate them
objective, commonly accepted
truth is ever more elusive, there is
no method to achieve consensus
official commission reports are an
ineffective ritual to provide
closure
utopian impulse of CTs: “new
beginning where secrecy vanishes
and power is transparent”
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the Warren Commission Report was supposed to
solve the JFK assassination; instead, it
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Satisfying Opposition Ideology
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CTs can also arise as the
“common man’s” opposition
ideology
quick, to the point, radical – an
answer to opaque,
undemocratic power structures
and unresponsive political
system
“profoundly satisfying politics”
CTs often deal with real
problems, but they do so
through ideological distortion
biggest problem: CTs are
generally ineffective in building
a credible opposition
movement
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conspiracy theories can create a protest culture,
but not an effective political opposition
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Conspiracy Theories: A Political Pathology?
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some CTs are undoubtedly
dangerous and repugnant, esp.
when they turn racist or antiSemitic
but CTs are not necessarily a
political pathology, much less a
psychological one
CTs are not, like Hofstadter
thought, limited to the fringes
of political culture
they permeate all walks of life
and all political camps
in a few cases like JFK, even a
majority of Americans at least
consider conspiracy theory as a
plausible explanation
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the tinfoil-hat wearing weirdo is an unfair cliché;
(most) conspiracy theorists are not crazy
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Conspiracy Culture
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Conspiracy Culture?
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CTs have entered the
mainstream of popular culture:
1970s paranoia movies, The XFiles, many more
logic and narrative structure of
CTs are particularly powerful –
CTs make for good stories
“conspiracy” and “plot” are
more or less synonymous!
in many cases, a lone hero or
small determined group unveil
the secret conspirators,
preventing disaster or restoring
justice, making for a good story
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“Illuminati: The Game of Conspiracy” lets players
create their own conspiracies and compete with
others for world domination
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Conspiracy Movies and Television
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“The X-Files”, particularly socalled mythology episodes
about Mulder’s quest to
uncover the government’s
cover-up of extraterrestrials
“The Manchurian Candidate”
(1962)
“Three Days of the Condor”
(1975)
“Capricorn One” (1978)
“JFK” (1991)
“Conspiracy Theory” (1997)
“V for Vendetta” (2005)
many others
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Mulder and Scully, the protagonists of the XFiles television series
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Homer the Great
The Simpsons, 1995
In this episode, Homer
discovers that several of his
friends belong to a secret
society, the “Stonecutters”,
and enjoy outrageous
privileges. He sets out to
discover the truth…
The entire episode is a
parody of Freemason or
Illuminati-centered
conspiracy theories.
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Homer the Great
The Simpsons, 1995
Finally, Homer is allowed to
join the Stonecutters and
finds out how the insidious
secret society spends its
time…
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“Mystery of the
Urinal Deuce”
South Park, 2006
In this episode, the kids
investigate who s!§tted in
the school urinal.
Accidentally, they discover
who created the conspiracy
theories about 9/11: the
government itself, because
it wants people to believe
they caused 9/11.
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Conclusion
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Conspiracy Theories and Ideological Contradictions
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CTs serve to (seemingly) dissolve
ideological contradictions
e.g.: 9/11 Truth Movement: US
sees itself as benevolent and
liberal nation, yet becomes the
victim of a catastrophic terrorist
attack and limits civil rights as a
result
e.g.: JFK: liberal spirit of 1960s was
replaced by the sharp social and
political conflict of the late 1960s
and the economic malaise of
1970s
in both cases, the negative
outcome was not compatible with
America’s self-perception and core
ideology of American
exceptionalism
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finding secret conspirators may
well be less disconcerting than
accepting the flaws and limits of
American ideology
this may explain why CTs are
certainly not limited to the US, but
are especially vibrant and colorful
there:
American self-perception and
ideology is highly idealistic, and
thus more prone to contradictions
which can give rise to CTs
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Thank You for Your Attention!
you can download this presentation at
www.amerikahaus.de/conspiracy
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