Hereâs one fun question to ask at a dinner party: What is your favorite conspiracy theory?
Thereâs the idea that the CIA killed John F. Kennedy. The moon landing was fake, and 9/11 was an inside job. Covid was designed by the Gates Foundation to control the worldâand the Covid vaccine had a microchip. Thereâs the deep state. Chemtrails. QAnon. The Illuminati. Reptilian overlords. Pizzagateâwhich says that high-ranking Democrats were running a child sex-trafficking ring out of a D.C. pizzeria.
That one, Pizzagate, is rivaled only by the idea that there is a group of Satan-worshipping globalists and Hollywood celebrities who traffic children in order to harvest adrenochrome, a chemical which, in this scenario, is extracted from their blood. Why? Itâs obvious: They inject it in order to stay young.
Itâs easy to joke about these theories. Itâs much harder to reckon with the fact that many Americans believe them sincerelyâand their justification is grounded in the fact that some conspiracy theories turn out to not be theories, but fact.
The government was poisoning alcohol during Prohibition. The FBI was illegally spying on civil-rights activists like MLK. The U.S. government did let some few hundred black men with syphilis go untreated to study the effects. And Covid likely came from a lab in Wuhan, China.
The question is how to tolerate and even encourage healthy speculation and investigation? How do we allow for skepticism of received wisdom, which may actually be wrong, without it leading to reptilian Jewish overlords?
In the past few weeks, the speculation surrounding Jeffrey Epsteinâs life and death is a perfect example of this conundrum. Itâs a story filled with smoke and unanswered questions: How did Epstein get so rich in the first place? Was his wealth connected to his crimes? Was he acting alone? Was there a client listâand if so, who was on it? Why did he get such a sweetheart deal? And on and on.
And then things get more far-fetched: Was Epsteinâs suicide faked? Who could have killed him? Was he connected to foreign intelligence? And my favorite: Was he running a Jewish cabal?
To help us understand why conspiracy theories are so compellingâand how we might better engage with those who believe themâis Ross Douthat.
Ross Douthat is an opinion columnist at The New York Times and host of the Interesting Times podcast. He has been covering conspiratorial thinkingâhow to understand it, and what to do about itâfor years.
In 2020, he wrote: âItâs a mistake to believe most conspiracy theories, but itâs also a mistake to assume that they bear no relation to reality. Some are just insane emanations or deliberate misinformation. But others exaggerate and misread important trends rather than denying them, or offer implausible explanations for mysteries that nonetheless linger unexplained.â Which we thought perfectly encapsulated the conundrum of handling conspiracy theories today.
So today on Honestly, Bari asks Ross: What is the state of conspiracy theories in America? How do we dispel conspiracy theories that are clearly falseâwithout relying on establishment sources the public no longer trusts? And what are the consequences when these theories go unchecked?
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