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Conspiracy Theories
In this preview from "The Saucerian," author Gabriel Mckee explains how the combination of fantastical stories and obscure bureaucracy launched the “space age of the imagination.”
In theory, scientists could've produced a deadly virus that accidentally infected lab workers. In practice, we know that didn't happen.
SARS-CoV-2 first emerged in humans in 2019. Despite much noise generated by lab leak proponents, the evidence indicates a natural origin.
Although social paranoia is more common than clinical paranoia, studies suggests that American society isn’t any more conspiratorial than it has been in the past.
In a remarkably similar way, conspiracy theories around the world cast doubt on the existence of real places.
Predictive power has perverse, anti-democratic consequences. So be a good citizen and lie to election pollsters.
Instead of giving the 239 suffering families and the public a true story, Netflix exploited a horrifying tragedy to push conspiracy theories.
Fiona Broome remembered Nelson Mandela dying in prison in the 1980s (he didn't). Oddly, many people had the same false memory.
Elon Musk, Jack Dorsey, Steve Jobs, Elizabeth Holmes – are these celebrity CEOs good for their business?
In the early 1900s, some Americans feared that teddy bears would not instill maternal instincts in girls, thereby causing "race suicide."
Media provocateurs and conspiracy theorists insist that they're "just asking questions." No, they aren’t.
Searching for truth in unorthodox ways can be a valuable exercise. But Anatoly Fomenko's alternate world history is just plain weird.
In "Off the Edge", journalist Kelly Weill dives down the strange rabbit hole of the flat-Earther community.