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Conspiracy theory mentality can be traced back to the John Birch Society
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Jan 15, 2022 14:09:39   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
currahee506 wrote:
True "conspiracy" can be traced to Eustace Mullins, Ezra Pound's student, as well as T.S. Elliot and Ernest Hemingway, who, while the chief librarian of The Library of Congress just so happened to read the primary sources of government-international correspondence between the political players in our history, and the history of Europe,
John Birch, by comparison, is a light-weight.


Don't forget about all the free masons and templars as they manipulate history in their efforts to put a descendant of Christ on the4 throne of the New One World Gov!! Holy Blood, Holy Grail baby!!

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 15:35:51   #
WEBCO
 
slatten49 wrote:
True 'nuf, Sam To paraphrase: Even a deaf, dumb and blind squirrel can find an acorn on occasion.


So recent "conspiracy theories" include

1 the FBI didn't illegally spy on Trump and his campaign.

2 C****-** came from a wet market

3 the v*****e is safe and effective.

4 the v*****e stops the spread of c***d19

5 masks work against a v***s

6 F***i "is" science and didn't pay for g**n of f******n research

Seems to me the difference between what is a conspiracy theory and what is actually true is about 6 to 9 months.

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 16:25:47   #
bylm1-Bernie
 
slatten49 wrote:
by Edward H. Miller

If you’re looking for the roots of today’s bizarre conspiracy-and-anger-driven politics, you need to look further back than the presidency of Donald Trump or even the rise of social media or talk radio — back to the accusatory, inflammatory, wild-eyed rhetoric of the John Birch Society in the 1960s and 1970s.

It’s beginning to fade into history, but the John Birch Society was once the most formidable anti-c*******t organization of the Cold War era. Named for an American army captain k**led by Chinese c*******ts, it was founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, a North Carolina-born candy magnate. (His company created the caramel “Sugar Daddy” on a stick.) Most Americans learned of the society after March 20, 1961, when it was widely reported that Welch had called former President Eisenhower a c*******t.

It was an outrageous and ludicrous assertion, but Welch was just getting started in weaving his tapestry of paranoia. He saw c*******t conspiracies lurking in colleges, high schools and the government.

Fluoride was being used to enervate Americans in advance of the coming c*******t occupation, he said.

Welch also called the civil rights movement a c*******t conspiracy.

Welch’s conspiracies fed postwar America’s growing suspicion of government and its belief in cover-ups in high places. He had particular influence in California, which played an outsize role in the growth of the John Birch Society.

With epicenters in Orange County and Los Angeles, California’s “Birchers” were instrumental in helping to ensure Richard Nixon’s gubernatorial loss in 1962, Barry Goldwater’s Republican p**********l nomination in 1964 and Ronald Reagan’s gubernatorial victory in 1966. Several California members of Congress were Birchers, including Reps. Edgar Hiestand and John Rousselot, who both represented parts of Los Angeles County.

As the years passed, Welch’s theories grew wilder. He eventually concluded that c*******m was just another name for the conspiracy begun by the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776. He also said that the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderbergers (a group that sought to foster dialogue between Europe and North America) were the puppet masters of U.S. foreign and economic interests. The society also called for the U.S. to withdraw from the United Nations and for the impeachment of Chief Justice Earl Warren.

In the 1970s, the John Birch Society became even more influential. Despite a widespread belief that the “responsible” right of William F. Buckley had purged the conservative movement of the Birchers, Welch was never excommunicated. His style of American conservatism remained potent.

In those years, Welch broadened the society’s focus by opposing a******n, high taxation and sex education — issues that propelled the Reagan revolution. Bircher Lewis Uhler was instrumental in passing Proposition 13 to reduce California’s property taxes in 1978.

All the while, Welch continued to press his extreme theories.

In the 1970s, Americans began receiving some confirmation that perhaps conspiracies weren’t really as rare and nutty as they seemed. In 1973 and 1974, Watergate demonstrated that a president could secretly abuse his constitutional authority. Americans learned that more government officials had spied for the Soviet Union and had worked with mobsters in an unsuccessful effort to k**l a foreign head of state. The CIA turned out to have conducted LSD experiments on Americans. After a while, anything seemed plausible. Over the years that followed, the number of people who said they trusted the government plummeted.

Welch is important today because, beginning in the 1980s and continuing on, his world has become ours. The depth of his influence on the t***sformation of the Republican Party — and therefore on America — has never been fully appreciated. His style of politics remained extremely potent after his death in 1985.

Reagan espoused conspiracy theories, such as his claim that Gerald Ford staged assassination attempts against himself to win sympathy v**es. In the 1990s, partisanship became more central, ideology more crucial. On the radical fringe of the far right, private m*****a members armed themselves to the teeth. Both major parties, they claimed, wanted to end American sovereignty. After the sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco in 1992 and 1993, the m*****a movement grew even more conspiracy-focused.

It was only a few years later, in 1996, that Alex Jones started his conspiratorial radio show “The Final Edition.” Jones asserted that the government had planned the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995 and had plotted to murder the Branch Davidians in Waco. Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Bill and Hillary Clinton were in a similar vein. Hillary covered up the murder of Vince Foster, Limbaugh suggested.

On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, Jones declared that “all terrorism that we’ve looked at, from the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City to Waco, has been government actions.” By 2006, at least one-third of Americans thought their government had either planned the attacks of 9/11 or allowed them to happen. And conspiracy theories began to thrive on new social media sites: Facebook. YouTube. Twitter. Facts went unchecked.

Tea party members argued that a conspiracy of g*******ts had caused the economic downturn. In 2012, Donald Trump tweeted “an extremely credible source ... told me @BarackObama’s birth certificate is a fraud.” By 2015, Trump was running for president.

And so it continues. Welch-like logic and Welch-like rhetoric have taken over much of the right with false myths that tempt the weak mind. More than two-thirds of Republicans still don’t believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 e******n. The Q***n conspiracy theory — which holds that Democrats in the so-called Deep State undermined Trump to cover up their child-sex racket — has at least one adherent in Congress.

Millions of Americans won’t take v*****es to prevent C****-** because they don’t trust science.

Today, Americans are stuck on the roller coaster of Robert Welch’s political imagination, and can’t get off.
by Edward H. Miller br br If you’re looking for t... (show quote)



I remember that accusation that Welch called Ike a c*******t. I haven't researched it but I seem to remember that Welch actually called Ike a "Com Simp" or a c*******t sympathizer. I wouldn't want to bet a lot of money on it but that's the way I remember it. Welch was pretty aggressive in his approach and he didn't have much patience for anyone who didn't h**e c*******m with a passion. I have never been a John Birch man but I had some close friends who were.

Reply
 
 
Jan 15, 2022 16:31:56   #
bylm1-Bernie
 
WEBCO wrote:
So recent "conspiracy theories" include

1 the FBI didn't illegally spy on Trump and his campaign.

2 C****-** came from a wet market

3 the v*****e is safe and effective.

4 the v*****e stops the spread of c***d19

5 masks work against a v***s

6 F***i "is" science and didn't pay for g**n of f******n research

Seems to me the difference between what is a conspiracy theory and what is actually true is about 6 to 9 months.



You're pretty much right. The right, including Fox News, was chastised for the things they said a year or two ago and now CNN and MSNBC are coming around and stating as true some of the exact things Fox was saying that caused the MSM to bring out the long swords. In fact, even Biden is contradicting what he himself said on several issues. I wonder if he'll ever state the border situation was his doing. I doubt it.

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 16:38:27   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
WEBCO wrote:
So recent "conspiracy theories" include

1 the FBI didn't illegally spy on Trump and his campaign.

2 C****-** came from a wet market

3 the v*****e is safe and effective.

4 the v*****e stops the spread of c***d19

5 masks work against a v***s

6 F***i "is" science and didn't pay for g**n of f******n research

Seems to me the difference between what is a conspiracy theory and what is actually true is about 6 to 9 months.


Good point! LOL!!

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 19:12:42   #
Ri-chard Loc: 23322
 
slatten49 wrote:
by Edward H. Miller

If you’re looking for the roots of today’s bizarre conspiracy-and-anger-driven politics, you need to look further back than the presidency of Donald Trump or even the rise of social media or talk radio — back to the accusatory, inflammatory, wild-eyed rhetoric of the John Birch Society in the 1960s and 1970s.

It’s beginning to fade into history, but the John Birch Society was once the most formidable anti-c*******t organization of the Cold War era. Named for an American army captain k**led by Chinese c*******ts, it was founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, a North Carolina-born candy magnate. (His company created the caramel “Sugar Daddy” on a stick.) Most Americans learned of the society after March 20, 1961, when it was widely reported that Welch had called former President Eisenhower a c*******t.

It was an outrageous and ludicrous assertion, but Welch was just getting started in weaving his tapestry of paranoia. He saw c*******t conspiracies lurking in colleges, high schools and the government.

Fluoride was being used to enervate Americans in advance of the coming c*******t occupation, he said.

Welch also called the civil rights movement a c*******t conspiracy.

Welch’s conspiracies fed postwar America’s growing suspicion of government and its belief in cover-ups in high places. He had particular influence in California, which played an outsize role in the growth of the John Birch Society.

With epicenters in Orange County and Los Angeles, California’s “Birchers” were instrumental in helping to ensure Richard Nixon’s gubernatorial loss in 1962, Barry Goldwater’s Republican p**********l nomination in 1964 and Ronald Reagan’s gubernatorial victory in 1966. Several California members of Congress were Birchers, including Reps. Edgar Hiestand and John Rousselot, who both represented parts of Los Angeles County.

As the years passed, Welch’s theories grew wilder. He eventually concluded that c*******m was just another name for the conspiracy begun by the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776. He also said that the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderbergers (a group that sought to foster dialogue between Europe and North America) were the puppet masters of U.S. foreign and economic interests. The society also called for the U.S. to withdraw from the United Nations and for the impeachment of Chief Justice Earl Warren.

In the 1970s, the John Birch Society became even more influential. Despite a widespread belief that the “responsible” right of William F. Buckley had purged the conservative movement of the Birchers, Welch was never excommunicated. His style of American conservatism remained potent.

In those years, Welch broadened the society’s focus by opposing a******n, high taxation and sex education — issues that propelled the Reagan revolution. Bircher Lewis Uhler was instrumental in passing Proposition 13 to reduce California’s property taxes in 1978.

All the while, Welch continued to press his extreme theories.

In the 1970s, Americans began receiving some confirmation that perhaps conspiracies weren’t really as rare and nutty as they seemed. In 1973 and 1974, Watergate demonstrated that a president could secretly abuse his constitutional authority. Americans learned that more government officials had spied for the Soviet Union and had worked with mobsters in an unsuccessful effort to k**l a foreign head of state. The CIA turned out to have conducted LSD experiments on Americans. After a while, anything seemed plausible. Over the years that followed, the number of people who said they trusted the government plummeted.

Welch is important today because, beginning in the 1980s and continuing on, his world has become ours. The depth of his influence on the t***sformation of the Republican Party — and therefore on America — has never been fully appreciated. His style of politics remained extremely potent after his death in 1985.

Reagan espoused conspiracy theories, such as his claim that Gerald Ford staged assassination attempts against himself to win sympathy v**es. In the 1990s, partisanship became more central, ideology more crucial. On the radical fringe of the far right, private m*****a members armed themselves to the teeth. Both major parties, they claimed, wanted to end American sovereignty. After the sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco in 1992 and 1993, the m*****a movement grew even more conspiracy-focused.

It was only a few years later, in 1996, that Alex Jones started his conspiratorial radio show “The Final Edition.” Jones asserted that the government had planned the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995 and had plotted to murder the Branch Davidians in Waco. Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Bill and Hillary Clinton were in a similar vein. Hillary covered up the murder of Vince Foster, Limbaugh suggested.

On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, Jones declared that “all terrorism that we’ve looked at, from the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City to Waco, has been government actions.” By 2006, at least one-third of Americans thought their government had either planned the attacks of 9/11 or allowed them to happen. And conspiracy theories began to thrive on new social media sites: Facebook. YouTube. Twitter. Facts went unchecked.

Tea party members argued that a conspiracy of g*******ts had caused the economic downturn. In 2012, Donald Trump tweeted “an extremely credible source ... told me @BarackObama’s birth certificate is a fraud.” By 2015, Trump was running for president.

And so it continues. Welch-like logic and Welch-like rhetoric have taken over much of the right with false myths that tempt the weak mind. More than two-thirds of Republicans still don’t believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 e******n. The Q***n conspiracy theory — which holds that Democrats in the so-called Deep State undermined Trump to cover up their child-sex racket — has at least one adherent in Congress.

Millions of Americans won’t take v*****es to prevent C****-** because they don’t trust science.

Today, Americans are stuck on the roller coaster of Robert Welch’s political imagination, and can’t get off.
by Edward H. Miller br br If you’re looking for t... (show quote)


The roots of today's conspiracy started with George Washington and Ben Franklin as Head Masons having no allegiances to the American Patriots. Remember Washington never created a Doctrine of Conquest as the Visto of the war after Cornwallis told him what is to become of America and its people. Washington instead capitulated to the King George III 1783 allowing him to dictate the terms for ending the war. And Ben Frankin was the lead negotiator for the King as his Esquire. No liberties, freedoms, sovereignty or any of the spoils of war were spoken to for the American Patriots. They lost all they fought for. And it got worse in 1787 1789 and 1791.

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 19:15:04   #
martsiva
 
slatten49 wrote:
by Edward H. Miller

If you’re looking for the roots of today’s bizarre conspiracy-and-anger-driven politics, you need to look further back than the presidency of Donald Trump or even the rise of social media or talk radio — back to the accusatory, inflammatory, wild-eyed rhetoric of the John Birch Society in the 1960s and 1970s.

It’s beginning to fade into history, but the John Birch Society was once the most formidable anti-c*******t organization of the Cold War era. Named for an American army captain k**led by Chinese c*******ts, it was founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, a North Carolina-born candy magnate. (His company created the caramel “Sugar Daddy” on a stick.) Most Americans learned of the society after March 20, 1961, when it was widely reported that Welch had called former President Eisenhower a c*******t.

It was an outrageous and ludicrous assertion, but Welch was just getting started in weaving his tapestry of paranoia. He saw c*******t conspiracies lurking in colleges, high schools and the government.

Fluoride was being used to enervate Americans in advance of the coming c*******t occupation, he said.

Welch also called the civil rights movement a c*******t conspiracy.

Welch’s conspiracies fed postwar America’s growing suspicion of government and its belief in cover-ups in high places. He had particular influence in California, which played an outsize role in the growth of the John Birch Society.

With epicenters in Orange County and Los Angeles, California’s “Birchers” were instrumental in helping to ensure Richard Nixon’s gubernatorial loss in 1962, Barry Goldwater’s Republican p**********l nomination in 1964 and Ronald Reagan’s gubernatorial victory in 1966. Several California members of Congress were Birchers, including Reps. Edgar Hiestand and John Rousselot, who both represented parts of Los Angeles County.

As the years passed, Welch’s theories grew wilder. He eventually concluded that c*******m was just another name for the conspiracy begun by the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776. He also said that the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderbergers (a group that sought to foster dialogue between Europe and North America) were the puppet masters of U.S. foreign and economic interests. The society also called for the U.S. to withdraw from the United Nations and for the impeachment of Chief Justice Earl Warren.

In the 1970s, the John Birch Society became even more influential. Despite a widespread belief that the “responsible” right of William F. Buckley had purged the conservative movement of the Birchers, Welch was never excommunicated. His style of American conservatism remained potent.

In those years, Welch broadened the society’s focus by opposing a******n, high taxation and sex education — issues that propelled the Reagan revolution. Bircher Lewis Uhler was instrumental in passing Proposition 13 to reduce California’s property taxes in 1978.

All the while, Welch continued to press his extreme theories.

In the 1970s, Americans began receiving some confirmation that perhaps conspiracies weren’t really as rare and nutty as they seemed. In 1973 and 1974, Watergate demonstrated that a president could secretly abuse his constitutional authority. Americans learned that more government officials had spied for the Soviet Union and had worked with mobsters in an unsuccessful effort to k**l a foreign head of state. The CIA turned out to have conducted LSD experiments on Americans. After a while, anything seemed plausible. Over the years that followed, the number of people who said they trusted the government plummeted.

Welch is important today because, beginning in the 1980s and continuing on, his world has become ours. The depth of his influence on the t***sformation of the Republican Party — and therefore on America — has never been fully appreciated. His style of politics remained extremely potent after his death in 1985.

Reagan espoused conspiracy theories, such as his claim that Gerald Ford staged assassination attempts against himself to win sympathy v**es. In the 1990s, partisanship became more central, ideology more crucial. On the radical fringe of the far right, private m*****a members armed themselves to the teeth. Both major parties, they claimed, wanted to end American sovereignty. After the sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco in 1992 and 1993, the m*****a movement grew even more conspiracy-focused.

It was only a few years later, in 1996, that Alex Jones started his conspiratorial radio show “The Final Edition.” Jones asserted that the government had planned the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995 and had plotted to murder the Branch Davidians in Waco. Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Bill and Hillary Clinton were in a similar vein. Hillary covered up the murder of Vince Foster, Limbaugh suggested.

On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, Jones declared that “all terrorism that we’ve looked at, from the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City to Waco, has been government actions.” By 2006, at least one-third of Americans thought their government had either planned the attacks of 9/11 or allowed them to happen. And conspiracy theories began to thrive on new social media sites: Facebook. YouTube. Twitter. Facts went unchecked.

Tea party members argued that a conspiracy of g*******ts had caused the economic downturn. In 2012, Donald Trump tweeted “an extremely credible source ... told me @BarackObama’s birth certificate is a fraud.” By 2015, Trump was running for president.

And so it continues. Welch-like logic and Welch-like rhetoric have taken over much of the right with false myths that tempt the weak mind. More than two-thirds of Republicans still don’t believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 e******n. The Q***n conspiracy theory — which holds that Democrats in the so-called Deep State undermined Trump to cover up their child-sex racket — has at least one adherent in Congress.

Millions of Americans won’t take v*****es to prevent C****-** because they don’t trust science.

Today, Americans are stuck on the roller coaster of Robert Welch’s political imagination, and can’t get off.
by Edward H. Miller br br If you’re looking for t... (show quote)


Where to start with this garbage?? I know nothing about the John Birch Society but I DO know how to do research which you have proven that you do not!! How much do YOU know about the Bavarian Illuminati?? Obviously nothing!! The Tri Lateral Commission - the CFR - and the Bilderbergers - are run by g*******ts - Waco was planned by the government - government cover ups? Let`s start with the coverup of JFK`s assassination - the CIA`s black site prisons - Blackwater`s atrocities - 911? How much research have you actually done about that?? THEN you keep pushing the old lie that this experimental drug is a 'v*****e' when millions of Americans did research and waited for more info that told a different story while 'v******ted' people were still getting this v***s and people stared to get major adverse reactions!!! All you have done here is post many lies without even researching which are lies and which are not!!

Reply
 
 
Jan 15, 2022 19:25:04   #
Ri-chard Loc: 23322
 
Pardon the misspell of Victor

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 19:35:37   #
Ri-chard Loc: 23322
 
martsiva wrote:
Where to start with this garbage?? I know nothing about the John Birch Society but I DO know how to do research which you have proven that you do not!! How much do YOU know about the Bavarian Illuminati?? Obviously nothing!! The Tri Lateral Commission - the CFR - and the Bilderbergers - are run by g*******ts - Waco was planned by the government - government cover ups? Let`s start with the coverup of JFK`s assassination - the CIA`s black site prisons - Blackwater`s atrocities - 911? How much research have you actually done about that?? THEN you keep pushing the old lie that this experimental drug is a 'v*****e' when millions of Americans did research and waited for more info that told a different story while 'v******ted' people were still getting this v***s and people stared to get major adverse reactions!!! All you have done here is post many lies without even researching which are lies and which are not!!
Where to start with this garbage?? I know nothing ... (show quote)


And what do you think was the cause for the birth of these bad guys? Do you know who the Founders were?

Reply
Jan 15, 2022 20:27:10   #
martsiva
 
Ri-chard wrote:
And what do you think was the cause for the birth of these bad guys? Do you know who the Founders were?


Yes I know who and what they were. Do you?

Reply
Jan 16, 2022 00:40:55   #
Ri-chard Loc: 23322
 
martsiva wrote:
Yes I know who and what they were. Do you?


Yes, deceivers and t*****rs with too many giving their allegiance to the Masonic order.

And there is proof of it.

Reply
 
 
Jan 16, 2022 01:33:45   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
slatten49 wrote:
by Edward H. Miller

If you’re looking for the roots of today’s bizarre conspiracy-and-anger-driven politics, you need to look further back than the presidency of Donald Trump or even the rise of social media or talk radio — back to the accusatory, inflammatory, wild-eyed rhetoric of the John Birch Society in the 1960s and 1970s.

It’s beginning to fade into history, but the John Birch Society was once the most formidable anti-c*******t organization of the Cold War era. Named for an American army captain k**led by Chinese c*******ts, it was founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, a North Carolina-born candy magnate. (His company created the caramel “Sugar Daddy” on a stick.) Most Americans learned of the society after March 20, 1961, when it was widely reported that Welch had called former President Eisenhower a c*******t.

It was an outrageous and ludicrous assertion, but Welch was just getting started in weaving his tapestry of paranoia. He saw c*******t conspiracies lurking in colleges, high schools and the government.

Fluoride was being used to enervate Americans in advance of the coming c*******t occupation, he said.

Welch also called the civil rights movement a c*******t conspiracy.

Welch’s conspiracies fed postwar America’s growing suspicion of government and its belief in cover-ups in high places. He had particular influence in California, which played an outsize role in the growth of the John Birch Society.

With epicenters in Orange County and Los Angeles, California’s “Birchers” were instrumental in helping to ensure Richard Nixon’s gubernatorial loss in 1962, Barry Goldwater’s Republican p**********l nomination in 1964 and Ronald Reagan’s gubernatorial victory in 1966. Several California members of Congress were Birchers, including Reps. Edgar Hiestand and John Rousselot, who both represented parts of Los Angeles County.

As the years passed, Welch’s theories grew wilder. He eventually concluded that c*******m was just another name for the conspiracy begun by the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776. He also said that the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderbergers (a group that sought to foster dialogue between Europe and North America) were the puppet masters of U.S. foreign and economic interests. The society also called for the U.S. to withdraw from the United Nations and for the impeachment of Chief Justice Earl Warren.

In the 1970s, the John Birch Society became even more influential. Despite a widespread belief that the “responsible” right of William F. Buckley had purged the conservative movement of the Birchers, Welch was never excommunicated. His style of American conservatism remained potent.

In those years, Welch broadened the society’s focus by opposing a******n, high taxation and sex education — issues that propelled the Reagan revolution. Bircher Lewis Uhler was instrumental in passing Proposition 13 to reduce California’s property taxes in 1978.

All the while, Welch continued to press his extreme theories.

In the 1970s, Americans began receiving some confirmation that perhaps conspiracies weren’t really as rare and nutty as they seemed. In 1973 and 1974, Watergate demonstrated that a president could secretly abuse his constitutional authority. Americans learned that more government officials had spied for the Soviet Union and had worked with mobsters in an unsuccessful effort to k**l a foreign head of state. The CIA turned out to have conducted LSD experiments on Americans. After a while, anything seemed plausible. Over the years that followed, the number of people who said they trusted the government plummeted.

Welch is important today because, beginning in the 1980s and continuing on, his world has become ours. The depth of his influence on the t***sformation of the Republican Party — and therefore on America — has never been fully appreciated. His style of politics remained extremely potent after his death in 1985.

Reagan espoused conspiracy theories, such as his claim that Gerald Ford staged assassination attempts against himself to win sympathy v**es. In the 1990s, partisanship became more central, ideology more crucial. On the radical fringe of the far right, private m*****a members armed themselves to the teeth. Both major parties, they claimed, wanted to end American sovereignty. After the sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco in 1992 and 1993, the m*****a movement grew even more conspiracy-focused.

It was only a few years later, in 1996, that Alex Jones started his conspiratorial radio show “The Final Edition.” Jones asserted that the government had planned the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995 and had plotted to murder the Branch Davidians in Waco. Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Bill and Hillary Clinton were in a similar vein. Hillary covered up the murder of Vince Foster, Limbaugh suggested.

On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, Jones declared that “all terrorism that we’ve looked at, from the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City to Waco, has been government actions.” By 2006, at least one-third of Americans thought their government had either planned the attacks of 9/11 or allowed them to happen. And conspiracy theories began to thrive on new social media sites: Facebook. YouTube. Twitter. Facts went unchecked.

Tea party members argued that a conspiracy of g*******ts had caused the economic downturn. In 2012, Donald Trump tweeted “an extremely credible source ... told me @BarackObama’s birth certificate is a fraud.” By 2015, Trump was running for president.

And so it continues. Welch-like logic and Welch-like rhetoric have taken over much of the right with false myths that tempt the weak mind. More than two-thirds of Republicans still don’t believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 e******n. The Q***n conspiracy theory — which holds that Democrats in the so-called Deep State undermined Trump to cover up their child-sex racket — has at least one adherent in Congress.

Millions of Americans won’t take v*****es to prevent C****-** because they don’t trust science.

Today, Americans are stuck on the roller coaster of Robert Welch’s political imagination, and can’t get off.
by Edward H. Miller br br If you’re looking for t... (show quote)

Conspiracy theory turning into t***h from the e******n to the planned demic !

Reply
Jan 16, 2022 01:34:23   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
slatten49 wrote:
...can handle the t***h.


Then do it!

Reply
Jan 16, 2022 01:35:27   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
slatten49 wrote:
True 'nuf, Sam To paraphrase: Even a deaf, dumb and blind squirrel can find an acorn on occasion.


Good huntin Tex! Hope you find the t***h!!

Reply
Jan 16, 2022 09:30:46   #
Oldsalt
 
slatten49 wrote:
by Edward H. Miller

If you’re looking for the roots of today’s bizarre conspiracy-and-anger-driven politics, you need to look further back than the presidency of Donald Trump or even the rise of social media or talk radio — back to the accusatory, inflammatory, wild-eyed rhetoric of the John Birch Society in the 1960s and 1970s.

It’s beginning to fade into history, but the John Birch Society was once the most formidable anti-c*******t organization of the Cold War era. Named for an American army captain k**led by Chinese c*******ts, it was founded in 1958 by Robert Welch, a North Carolina-born candy magnate. (His company created the caramel “Sugar Daddy” on a stick.) Most Americans learned of the society after March 20, 1961, when it was widely reported that Welch had called former President Eisenhower a c*******t.

It was an outrageous and ludicrous assertion, but Welch was just getting started in weaving his tapestry of paranoia. He saw c*******t conspiracies lurking in colleges, high schools and the government.

Fluoride was being used to enervate Americans in advance of the coming c*******t occupation, he said.

Welch also called the civil rights movement a c*******t conspiracy.

Welch’s conspiracies fed postwar America’s growing suspicion of government and its belief in cover-ups in high places. He had particular influence in California, which played an outsize role in the growth of the John Birch Society.

With epicenters in Orange County and Los Angeles, California’s “Birchers” were instrumental in helping to ensure Richard Nixon’s gubernatorial loss in 1962, Barry Goldwater’s Republican p**********l nomination in 1964 and Ronald Reagan’s gubernatorial victory in 1966. Several California members of Congress were Birchers, including Reps. Edgar Hiestand and John Rousselot, who both represented parts of Los Angeles County.

As the years passed, Welch’s theories grew wilder. He eventually concluded that c*******m was just another name for the conspiracy begun by the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776. He also said that the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderbergers (a group that sought to foster dialogue between Europe and North America) were the puppet masters of U.S. foreign and economic interests. The society also called for the U.S. to withdraw from the United Nations and for the impeachment of Chief Justice Earl Warren.

In the 1970s, the John Birch Society became even more influential. Despite a widespread belief that the “responsible” right of William F. Buckley had purged the conservative movement of the Birchers, Welch was never excommunicated. His style of American conservatism remained potent.

In those years, Welch broadened the society’s focus by opposing a******n, high taxation and sex education — issues that propelled the Reagan revolution. Bircher Lewis Uhler was instrumental in passing Proposition 13 to reduce California’s property taxes in 1978.

All the while, Welch continued to press his extreme theories.

In the 1970s, Americans began receiving some confirmation that perhaps conspiracies weren’t really as rare and nutty as they seemed. In 1973 and 1974, Watergate demonstrated that a president could secretly abuse his constitutional authority. Americans learned that more government officials had spied for the Soviet Union and had worked with mobsters in an unsuccessful effort to k**l a foreign head of state. The CIA turned out to have conducted LSD experiments on Americans. After a while, anything seemed plausible. Over the years that followed, the number of people who said they trusted the government plummeted.

Welch is important today because, beginning in the 1980s and continuing on, his world has become ours. The depth of his influence on the t***sformation of the Republican Party — and therefore on America — has never been fully appreciated. His style of politics remained extremely potent after his death in 1985.

Reagan espoused conspiracy theories, such as his claim that Gerald Ford staged assassination attempts against himself to win sympathy v**es. In the 1990s, partisanship became more central, ideology more crucial. On the radical fringe of the far right, private m*****a members armed themselves to the teeth. Both major parties, they claimed, wanted to end American sovereignty. After the sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco in 1992 and 1993, the m*****a movement grew even more conspiracy-focused.

It was only a few years later, in 1996, that Alex Jones started his conspiratorial radio show “The Final Edition.” Jones asserted that the government had planned the Oklahoma City bombings in 1995 and had plotted to murder the Branch Davidians in Waco. Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Bill and Hillary Clinton were in a similar vein. Hillary covered up the murder of Vince Foster, Limbaugh suggested.

On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, Jones declared that “all terrorism that we’ve looked at, from the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City to Waco, has been government actions.” By 2006, at least one-third of Americans thought their government had either planned the attacks of 9/11 or allowed them to happen. And conspiracy theories began to thrive on new social media sites: Facebook. YouTube. Twitter. Facts went unchecked.

Tea party members argued that a conspiracy of g*******ts had caused the economic downturn. In 2012, Donald Trump tweeted “an extremely credible source ... told me @BarackObama’s birth certificate is a fraud.” By 2015, Trump was running for president.

And so it continues. Welch-like logic and Welch-like rhetoric have taken over much of the right with false myths that tempt the weak mind. More than two-thirds of Republicans still don’t believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 e******n. The Q***n conspiracy theory — which holds that Democrats in the so-called Deep State undermined Trump to cover up their child-sex racket — has at least one adherent in Congress.

Millions of Americans won’t take v*****es to prevent C****-** because they don’t trust science.

Today, Americans are stuck on the roller coaster of Robert Welch’s political imagination, and can’t get off.
by Edward H. Miller br br If you’re looking for t... (show quote)

And how many of those “conspiracies” have been shown to be accurate? A bunch! We are being manipulated by g*******t powers that want nothing more than to see America reduced from the global superpower and be manipulated by the UN. They do not want America to maintain its sovereignty. So yes, a lot of what the JBS said during the past 60 + years was true. There is a c*******t influence in the school system both high schools and colleges. So maybe you should look and listen and not just dismiss it as all conspiracy theories.

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