World's greatest conspiracy theories and secret societies - Bernadine Christner - E-Book

World's greatest conspiracy theories and secret societies E-Book

Bernadine Christner

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Explore the World's Greatest Conspiracy Theories From an Objective Point of View! There are two sides to every story, and the truth lies somewhere in the middle… Since the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the American public has become increasingly suspicious of its government's real intentions. They started believing that the US government is hiding the real truth and conspires against its own people. Ever since the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center on 11th of September 2001, we have witnessed the continuous rise of conspiracy theories. As they offer alternative explanations of real-life events, conspiracy theories are often filled with contradictions. The rise of the Internet has proved to be a fertile ground for developing conspiracy theories. While there are hundreds of websites on conspiracy theories online, not all of them offer credible information. As a result, the general public often dismisses conspiracy theories as unfounded or even bizarre. However, it is up to us to do our due diligence and investigate these claims. The book Conspiracy theories and secret societies offers an objective approach to this rather gloomy and dark subject matter. It is up to the reader to see these stories as words of astonishment or as words of warning. This book will offer you an objective insight into conspiracy theories concerning: • AIDS/HIV; • The Big Brother; • The X-Files; • Osama bin Laden; • Atlantis, and many more! Do you want to get an objective perspective on some of the greatest conspiracy theories that have shaken the entire world? Then this book is just for you! Take a deep dive into the world of conspiracy theories and secret societies, and get ready to see a unique perspective on how these theories have shaped our world today! So, what are you waiting for?

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Aids/Hiv

Woodpecker

Aum Shinrikyo (Supreme Truth)

Big Brother

The Airship of 1897

Yockey Francis Parker

Osama Bin Laden

Cathars

Government of the Zionist Occupation

Foundation Chalcedon

The Lamb of God's Church

Agency of Central Intelligence

Church of Satan

Tsunami in Asia in 2004

The American Protective Association

Cointelpro: the Fbi's Covert War Against America

William Cooper

Movement for Creativity

Atlantis

Antichrist

Mutilations Of Cattle

 

WORLD'S GREATEST CONSPIRACY THEORIES AND SECRET SOCIETIES

The Truth Below the Thick Veil of Deception Unearthed New World Order, Deadly Man-Made Diseases, Occult Symbolism, Illuminati, and More!

BERNADINE CHRISTNER

INTRODUCTION

D

espite his stated qualms, President Barack Obama ushered in the new year on December 31, 2011, by signing the National Defense Authorization Act, which grants the government expanded powers to detain, interrogate, and punish its people. Under this new act, government agencies may order the indefinite imprisonment of American citizens without charges or trial, the possible military detention of ordinary citizens who would normally be outside of military control, and the transfer of law enforcement, penal, and custodial powers currently held by the Department of Justice to the Department of Defense. According to US Senator Lindsey Graham, a strong backer of the legislation, “the homeland is part of the battlefield” in the worldwide fight on terror.

Since the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the American people have become more convinced that their government lies to them and conspires against them. Rick Ross, whose Ross Institute of New Jersey researches conspiracies, has seen that an increasing number of Americans believe that manipulative forces are at work behind the scenes of their government.

Conspiracy theorists quickly react that there are several grounds to accuse the government of shady transactions behind the scenes. While only a few whistleblowers—officially labeled “kooks and dissidents”—tried to warn the general public about secret government agencies, it was later revealed that in the late 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, the FBI's COINTELPRO had orders to defame, disgrace, and dispose of war protesters, radical political groups, and freedom marchers by any means necessary. The CIA's evil, top-secret MK-ULTRA program did undertake heinous brainwashing and mind-altering drug experiments that may have created the Unabomber as well as the ideal assassins.

When nuclear weapons were still in their infancy in 1950, the Department of Defense exploded atomic devices in desert regions before monitoring unsuspecting citizens in cities downwind from the explosion for medical issues and fatality rates.

More than a million people were exposed to germ warfare in 1966.

Scientists from the United States Army dropped bacteria-filled light bulbs onto ventilation grates in the New York City subway system.

Senate hearings in 1977 showed that 239 densely populated locations, including San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Key West, Panama City, Minneapolis, and St. Louis, had been polluted with biological agents between 1949 and 1969.

Evidence emerged in 1995 indicating the biological weapons used during the Gulf War were developed in Houston and Boca Raton and tested on Texas Department of Corrections inmates.

In the years after the World Trade Center was destroyed on September 11, 2001, Mike Ward of PopMatters (January 3, 2003) has described “probably the most astounding explosion of ‘conspiracy theories in American history.” Angry conjecture, centered mostly on dirty government deals, ulterior objectives, and suspected cooperation in the assaults, has reached a pitch that easily surpasses that which followed the Kennedy assassination.”

Conspiracy theories are often riddled with internal contradictions, and normal people reject some as absolutely bizarre and insane. Often, the truth is somewhere in the center, and the role of the diligent researcher is to make an informed decision. Unfortunately, those who want to dominate and influence others may get the final laugh if certain conspiracy theories are dismissed as too wild and outlandish to merit consideration.

Conspiracy theorists fear that Big Brother's eyes and ears are getting more active throughout the country.

Cameras are appearing on street corners around the United States and other nations such as England. They are ostensibly there to assist police in scanning license plates on stolen cars, apprehending thieves, and escaping killers. In addition, many cameras have facial recognition capabilities and can cross-reference any citizen suspected of antisocial behavior or even the most minor offenses with an extensive database.

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) chips the size of a grain of sand is used to track children's attendance and movements at school, retail product sales trends, and manufacturing worker habits. According to reports, plans are to implant a chip in all United States and European infants.

Government agents may readily monitor both landlines and mobile phones.

An anachronism is making a private call. The FBI has been compelled to disclose that it routinely monitors Internet radio talk shows throughout the United States, as well as email and internet surfing habits.

Even the average American citizen, who is more interested in sports and paying the bills than politics and conspiracies, may be uneasy about the fact that the National Defense Authorization Act has expanded the Patriot Act's power and that three Republican presidential candidates openly support water-boarding as a tool of interrogation. How far would the government go in using its new powers to force a person accused of treason or terrorism to plead to those charges?

From its inception, America has been a breeding ground for conspiracies and secret groups. For example, Christopher Columbus had apocalyptic views, claiming to have gotten a vision that the world will end in 1650 and that it was his divine purpose to locate a new continent that would be the site of the new heaven and new earth prophesied by St. John in the Book of Revelation. In the 1600s, the master Freemason Sir Francis Bacon thought America was the New Atlantis, bringing out a New World Order that would return all humans to the earthly paradise during the Golden Age.

Petty conspiracies about political or corporate competitors are as ancient as the human brain, writes Daniel Pipes in Front-Page magazine (January 13, 2004). However, worries of vast conspiracies, such as a secret organization plotting to take over the globe, date back barely 900 years and have “been operational for barely two centuries, since the French Revolution.” While Madame Guillotine was shaving royal heads, some residents blamed the revolution on the Bavarian Illuminati's political machinations and its grip on the Jacobins.

Fear of such conspiracies and mysterious groups has filled American history with warnings of hidden machinations by Freemasons, Zionists, Roman Catholics, Communists, World Bankers, Bilderbergers, Illuminati, Secret Government, New Agers, and alien invasions. Conspiracy theories have evolved into self-fulfilling histories of nefarious intrigues responsible for the killings of Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and Princess Diana.

Diana, Princess of Wales According to polls, a growing proportion of Americans feel they have not been given the truth about Pearl Harbor, the Gulf of Tonkin, the Oklahoma City bombing, the Waco fires, or the 9/11 Twin Towers.

Sometimes it seems like these paranoid folks are on to something. When conspiracies like the ones mentioned above prove to be real or partly correct, the assumption that there is a kernel of truth in even the most outlandish conspiracy theory seems to be true as well. Michael Barkun, a political scientist at Syracuse University and the author of A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America (2003), thinks that every conspiracy theory has three principles: Nothing occurs by chance; nothing is as it seems; everything is interconnected. According to Barkun, the heart of conspiracy theories "lies in efforts to distinguish and explain evil." Barkun also claims that current conspiracy theories have undergone significant new development, incorporating the occult, heretical, and unfashionable, such as spiritualism, alchemy, and theosophy.

With the advent of the Internet, anybody can become a conspiracy theorist and broadcast unregulated, uncontested, and uncontested accusations of government corruption, racial propaganda, or extraterrestrial abduction throughout the globe. There are hundreds of active websites devoted to conspiracy theories and secret organizations on Google alone. Sharing tales about conspiracies and secret organizations is similar to spreading nasty gossip. It is necessary to know what is factual and what is just a mirror of someone else's particular biases and views.

For many years, we have investigated and examined the immense effect of conspiracy theories on society and how people's views may be swayed for good or ill via the spread of specific ideas, theories, and beliefs. While this book seems to capture the more gloomy faces of human history, the pictures that emerge in the dark mirrors reflecting depictions of turmoil, confusion, and deception down through the years, we have done our best to approach this work objectively. We do not believe in any conspiracy theories and do not belong to any secret societies. It is up to the reader to choose if this book is a work of amusement or enlightenment, a word of astonishment or a word of warning.

AIDS/HIV

According to conspiracy theorists, AIDS did not originate in Africa but rather in secret government labs that developed this and other heinous biological weapons.

The first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai, utilized the world spotlight to assert that the AIDS virus was an intentionally designed biological weapon used in warfare. She rejected the hypothesis that AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) originated in monkeys, pointing out that Africans had lived near monkeys from time immemorial. But, she noted, there was no denying the sobering truth that 25 million of the 38 million people who have AIDS worldwide are Africans, with the vast majority being women.

Women make up the majority of afflicted Africans.

The United States State Department welcomed Maathai on her Nobel Peace Prize triumph but disagreed with her statements that the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS was created as a bioweapon in a Western laboratory for the goal of mass extinction. While such a statement may be expected from the State Department, conspiracy theorists are quick to point out that one of the primary goals of the New World Order and its agents working in the shadows behind every government in the world is to reduce the number of people in power. Substantially increase the world's population

Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute and Luc Montagnier of the Pasteur Institute in Paris claimed to have discovered the AIDS virus in 1984. A lawsuit was filed in 1987 to resolve the dispute. However, the virus's discoverers have never agreed on the virus's origins or the genesis of AIDS. Montagnier thought that the virus's origins were unknown and critical to differentiate between the virus's beginnings and the AIDS pandemic. Gallo, the more powerful of the two experts, claimed that the virus descended from a common viral parent seen in animals and was transmitted to humans via monkeys. Gallo said that in 1983, a year before he found the virus, Ann Giudici Fettner, a freelance writer who had lived in Africa, informed him that green monkeys in central Africa caused AIDS. However, in her book The Truth about AIDS, Fettner never mentions green monkeys and stresses her belief that AIDS started in America. Despite the lack of scientific studies to back up Gallo's green monkey thesis, the explanation remained popular among the media and the general public until the late 1990s, when another group of American scientists claimed to have uncovered the virus's origin in a kind of chimp.