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Jaron Harambam
“The Truth Is Out There”
Conspiracy Culture in an Age of Epistemic Instability
By Jaron Harambam
“The Truth Is Out There”
Conspiracy culture in an age of epistemic instability
~
De waarheid op losse schroeven
Complotdenken in een tijd van epistemische instabiliteit
Proefschrift
ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor aan de
Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
op gezag van de
rector magnificus
Prof.dr. H.A.P. Pols
en volgens besluit van het College voor Promoties.
De openbare verdediging zal plaatsvinden op
donderdag 26 oktober om 15.30 uur
door
Jaron Harambam
geboren te Amsterdam, 16 januari 1983
Promotiecommissie:
Promotoren:
Prof.dr. D. Houtman, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam,
Leuven University
Prof.dr. S.A. Aupers, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam,
Leuven University
Overige leden:
Prof.dr. E.A. van Zoonen, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
Prof.dr. P. Achterberg, Tilburg University
Prof.dr. R. Laermans, Leuven University
Prof.dr. W.G.J. Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam
Prof.dr. A. Rabo, Stockholm University
Acknowledgements
Although I am really proud of having brought this PhD project to a successful
end, it is only with the cooperation, inspiration and love of so many people
around me that I have been able to do so.
A first and special thanks to the participants of this study for their
trust and time to show me what role “conspiracy theories” play in their
everyday lives. I appreciate your willingness to have let me into your lives
without exactly knowing what I will do with whatever you were sharing
with me. These experiences have been fascinating and made a lasting impact
on me, both professionally and personally, so thank you.
I also thank the reviewers and the committee at The Netherlands
Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) who have granted this project,
‘Conspiracy Culture in the Netherlands: Modernity and Its Cultural
Discontents’, number 404-10-438, with funding.
Then my promotors, Stef Aupers and Dick Houtman, thank you
for having nurtured me so well as an all-round sociologist. Ever since I made
my first professional steps during my research master, you guys gave me the
confidence and opportunity to walk and look further, but always kept a
critical eye on my explorations. I am also grateful that you have consistently
put my professional development central in our collaborations, for example
by making me first author to our joint publications. Stef, your incessant
support over all those years – always taking the time to meet me, read my
work, and talk about whatever was on my mind – has been incredibly
helpful, intellectually stimulating and personally a lot of fun as well. I am
therefore so happy that our mentor-apprentice relationship has developed
into a real friendship over the last years. I enjoy the openness we now have
to discuss personal and sociological issues alike. Our many work trips abroad
always lead to exciting adventures and hilarious conversations, and I am
looking forward for those still to come.
My former fellow cultural sociologists at CROCUS, Erasmus
University Rotterdam: Peter Achterberg, Jeroen van der Waal, and Willem de
Koster. Although I always had difficulties to really fit in, I never felt
unwelcome nor unappreciated. From the very start, you guys accepted me
and took me along as part of the gang, despite our differences in approach,
background, and lifestyle. Peter, thank you for always being so supportive
of me and my work, and of course, for having had an important hand in
making my PhD project, and its extension, possible. Samira van Bohemen,
Roy Kemmers en Liesbet van Zoonen, I enjoyed your alternative voices in
our research group. Samira and Roy, it is beautiful to see how we developed
in our own ways into proper sociologists over the last seven years.
My dear Irene (van Oorschot), from the first moment we met in
our PhD reading group I was charmed by your outgoing and witty
personality. You made my time at our department fun and stimulating, I
cannot tell you how important you were for making me feel at home in
Rotterdam, as a friend and as a colleague. I cherish those years we worked
together in our little office, thank you. But there are more great people at
our university I wish to thank. Friso van Houdt, thank you for the good
times we have together, sharing personal ponderings about life in- and
outside academia. I enjoy how you always dot our conversations with
references to the great sociologists, and of course, to Foucault. Maja
Hertoghs, Sanne Boersma, Rogier van Reekum, Jess Bier, Talitha Stam, Rob
Timans, and Ali Konyali, it was a pleasure to have you guys around for a talk
and a walk in between work. Willem Schinkel, Justus Uitermark and Peter
Mascini, it was inspiring to have you guys working at our department, and
many thanks for the great feedback I got on my work at our PhD days. Mark
van Ostaijen, Frank Daudeij en Erwin Dekker, what a wonderful adventure
it was to set up the Academic Culture Group. We did not organize as much as
we wanted, but bringing together so many different PhD students from all
our different departments felt special and I am proud of us to have started
this important mission of nurturing “culture” at our graduate school.
This counts for the Netherlands Graduate School of Science, Technology
and Modern Culture (WTMC) as well where I have had the opportunity to
experience thought provoking and socially stimulating graduate schooling at
their summer schools and work-shops. They know how to organize and
foster intellectual and personal growth with fascinating lectures and pieces
to read, but also with the more playful activities generally lost in science.
Thank you, Teun Zuiderent-Jerak, Willem Halffman and Sally Wyatt for
your efforts to bring these events to a success, and Andreas Mitzschke, Anne
Wolters, Hans Schouwenburg, Willemijn Krebbekx and Else Vogel for the
fun we had over there. Tom Gieryn and Steven Shapin thank you for their
your helpful thoughts and suggestions on my work after presenting at the
WTMC’s 2013 Annual Meeting.
A special thanks to the people from the Fulbright Association and the
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds who enabled me to spend half a year at
Northwestern University, Illinois, USA. It was a fascinating experience to
work, live and study in a country that feels so familiar, yet is so different
from life in Europe. In particular I would like to thank Steven Epstein and
Helen Tilly for hosting me at the wonderful Science in Human Culture
program. I have learned a lot from your ability to convey critical feedback
in such a well-versed way. Aaron Norton and Ozzie Zehner, thank you for
making me feel not alone in Chicago and for the interesting talks we had
about life in the US, academia, conspiracy theories, and environmentalism,
they often turned my thoughts upside down, and nothing feels better than
that. Aaron, thank you for bringing me into contact with Daniel Williford
who has meticulously proofread my dissertation. Daniel, I loved our
interaction from the beginning, you are so funny, humble and diligent and I
learned a lot from the corrections you made. Hopefully you can be that
“aggressive editor” for me in the future!
And lastly, I want to thank all those wonderful people who have
helped me indirectly with completing this work. Laurens Buijs and Marijn
Siebel, my good friends, with you guys I share this fascination for the crazy
world around us, and our many talks and projects involving sociology,
Latour and STS have been so important for my intellectual growth, and
always a lot of fun as well! Jorrit Goddijn, Marvin Jacobsz, Mirthe van
Lieshout, Evert Bosdriesz, Mark Bosman, and Marijn Siebel (again), who
would have thought that what we were told at the introduction weekend of
the Beta-Gamma Propedeuse was actually going to be true? We really became
friends for a lifetime! Camila Ferro, Judith Fronczek and Lior Tabib, you all
three make me happy in so many ways, and our friendship is one I don’t
want to live without. Justin Merino, Yair Landau and Alon Steinmetz, thank
you for the good times and warm friendship we developed during the many
times I escaped my PhD to come to enjoy my life in Tel Aviv. Motti
Harambam and Tanya Rosenberg, thank you for always welcoming me to
your house in Tel Aviv, which feels like mine now too. I cannot wait for our
next out-of-the-ordinary Shabbat dinner. And finally, my brother and parents,
Royie, Rammy and Annelies, you guys are the safety net I always can rely
on, and over the past six years I have often done so. I am so fortunate to
have this warm and intimate family bond with you, this ultimate back-stage
where I can be totally myself. Royie, thank you for your solid and calm
temper and the humor you always bring in. Rammy and Annelies, thank you
for having given me the possibility to grow up bi-culturally. I am so grateful
to have developed the capability to understand and travel between different
cultural worlds. I take advantage of that every day.
Let there always be people for me to connect with, and I am a satisfied man.
Contents
1. Introduction
1.1 Everything in the world happens according to a plan 1
1.2 Academics on Conspiracy Theories: The Pathological Other 11
1.2.1 Pathology Number One: Conspiracy Theories as Bad Science 12
1.2.2 Pathology Number Two: Conspiracy Theories as Paranoid Politics 14
1.2.3 Bad Science + Paranoid Politics = Societal Danger 17
1.2.4 What Is Wrong with Conspiracy Theories as the Pathological Other? 18
1.3 Conspiracy Theories: Making Sense in/of a Complex World 22
1.4 A Cultural Sociological Approach: Meaning, Diversity and Relationality 26
1.5 Outline of the Book 30
2. Methodology
2.1 Introduction 35
2.2 The Field 35
2.3 The Sources 41
2.4 The Analyses 58
This email does not stand alone: over the course of that weekend I
have been directed through several of my other sources on Facebook
to a number of articles and postings similarly questioning the official
reading of 11/13. In The Paris Attacks: What You Really Need to Know I
read about the
concern from the conscious community – who have woken up to the
reality that shadow power moguls have infiltrated our governments,
media and international bodies with the agenda of instituting a one
world government – that the latest Paris attacks are purposely
designed and implemented to further their aim2
The author of the article What’s Really Going On With Paris Terror
Attacks Summed Up In 4 Minutes tells us how:
[T]his event resembles other incidents which the media labels
‘terrorist attacks’ and I am equally skeptical about the motivation
behind this one. As University of Ottawa Professor Emeritus of
Economics Dr. Michel Chossudovsky has argued:
“a criminal undertaking at a global level … and there is an ongoing
war … The global war on terrorism … which is fake, it is based on
fake premises. It tells us that somehow America and the Western world
are going after a fictitious enemy, the Islamic State, when in fact the
Islamic State is fully supported and financed by the Western military
alliance … They say Muslims are terrorists, but it just so happens
that terrorists are Made in America. . . . The global war on terrorism
is a fabrication, a big lie and a crime against humanity [link to
original source].”
“the media coverage of these tragic events was casually linked up with
the war in the Middle East, highlighting France’s commitment—
alongside its allies—in waging a ‘humanitarian war’ against the
terrorists. The attacks were described without evidence as an act of
revenge and retribution against France for having bombed ISIS
strongholds in Syria and Iraq as part of Obama’s counter-terrorism
air campaign […] The political discourse is in some regards
reminiscent of the 9/11 attacks and the statements of George W.
Bush et al. The media immediately started comparing the November
13 attacks in Paris to 9/11, intimating that France was at war and
that the alleged Islamic State attack was from abroad, i.e. the Middle
East” [link to original source].3
The alternative news sites that I visited on a daily basis since I started
my fieldwork similarly feature articles with myriad doubts about what
really happened in Paris. These articles have headlines such as: Analyst:
Attacks in Paris Possibly False-Flag Operation4; VIDEO: This Interview About
the Paris Attacks You Won’t Find on Television5; Historian: Attacks in Paris
Carried Out by Professional Commandos6; German Minister: Syrian Passport
Perpetrator Paris Possibly False Flag to Scare People for Refugees7. These
articles make one thing abundantly clear: the official explanation
offered by our authorities of what happened on that November night
are not believed by (what are commonly called) conspiracy theorists8.
These messages are consistent with what I have found over
five years of following a continuous stream of articles, emails,
exposés, videos, Facebook posts, and other reports of hidden truths
and deceit. Besides the abovementioned doubts about the official
explanations that arise each and every time a tragic event occurs,
there are many more less acute instances of (what are generally seen
as) conspiracy theories. Such explanations of social phenomena
involving the secret actions of some people trying to bring about a
certain desired outcome, to provide a provisionary definition, are
indeed numerous. When delving into the world of conspiracy
theories, one is made aware of the covert machinations of the world’s
largest multinationals who do everything in order to satisfy those who
profit from their profits: bribe government officials, direct public
policy, manipulate scientific research, evade taxation, infiltrate
regulatory bodies, dishonor human rights, destroy nature. Or one
will hear about secret societies and the Illuminati in particular who
covertly control the music and film industry and force artists, if they
want to be successful, to sell their soul to the devil. It is easy to see
who did so, just look for the display of satanic symbols (rain, snakes
and triangles) in their music clips which expresses their dark loyalty.
And those unwilling to be pawns in the game of the Illuminati are
merciless eliminated, think of Marilyn Monroe, Bob Marley, Tupac
Shakur and of course, Michael Jackson. Other difficult persona are
similarly taken away by this global elite before they could make a real
change. John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Princess Diana did
not succeed, now you know why. Banking dynasties are frequently
mentioned, such as the Rothschild’s who are said to have profited
from all wars and upheavals in history by consistently financing both
fighting parties will surely pass. Never a losing game. And, of course,
UFO’s, aliens and other signs of extraterrestrial life are, so we are
told, consistently covered up by our governments. Next to the real
truth behind tragic events consistently framed as terrorist attacks,
there is a plethora of other things they don’t want you to know about.
Conspiracy theories do not just come in many shapes and
sizes, but are hugely popular as well. According to many opinion
polls, both in the United States and Europe, significant segments of
Western populations adhere to one or more conspiracy theories.
Gallup, for example, has shown that fifty years after, a majority of
Americans “still believe JFK was killed in a conspiracy”9. A 2013
survey by Public Policy Polling finds that “28% of [United States]
voters believe that a secretive power elite with a globalist agenda is
conspiring to eventually rule the world through an authoritarian
world government, or New World Order” and another fifteen
percent believes “the US government to control our minds through
television”10. These are numbers that account for tens of millions US
citizens and similar figures are found across the pond. A 2012 survey
conducted by Opinion Matters in the United Kingdom claimed that
“52 percent believe UFO evidence has been covered up because
widespread knowledge of their existence would threaten government
stability”11. Survey research in the Netherlands concluded in 2015 that
almost forty percent believe that “the pharmaceutical industry can
cure serious illnesses, but has more interest in keeping people sick so
they can sell more pills” and about twenty percent “believes the US
government to be behind the attacks of 9/11, or at least had concrete
foreknowledge about it”12. These public opinion surveys have recently
been corroborated by social scientific research. J. Eric Oliver and
Thomas J. Wood (2014) claim that a similar twenty percent of U.S.
citizens hold their governments responsible for the attacks of 9/11.
They also claim that ten percent believes that the “vapor trails left
behind by aircrafts are actually chemical agents sprayed in a
clandestine program directed by government officials” (2014: 956).
When millions of people in Western democracies adhere to
conspiracy theories, it is fair to say that it has become a true mass
societal phenomenon.
Conspiracy theories figure rather prominently in popular
culture as well (e.g. Kellner, 2003; Knight, 2000; Melley, 2000).
The TV-series The X-Files (1993-2002) centered on two FBI agents
who investigate unsolved cases of supernatural and other unexplained
phenomena. The skeptical Agent Scully and the gullible Agent Mulder
stumble over the years upon government cover-ups of extraterrestrial
life and what seem even greater conspiracies to colonize Earth. Trust
no one, the series’ iconic slogan, became a cult theme featuring widely
in today’s popular culture. The 1997 Hollywood blockbuster
Conspiracy Theory skillfully plays with common stereotypes: Mel
Gibson may have started off as the paranoid cab driver who lives in an
New York apartment-turned-fortress with steel walls, floors and
ceilings, and locks everywhere, even on the fridge, but along the
movie it becomes clear that his feelings of persecution were not that
paranoid after all. And what about the widely acclaimed science
fiction thriller The Matrix (1999) which propagated the (conspiracy)
idea that the world as we know it is one big lie, one giant illusion, one
enormous simulated reality constructed in order to fool the masses
into believing that they are free while in effect they are slaves for the
system. Who wasn’t mind boggled by the thesis it put forward: how
to tell, after all, if we aren’t really living in that simulated reality we
all believe to be real? The best-selling novels of Dan Brown (and the
movies based on them) delving into the dark undercurrents of the
Vatican such as the Da Vinci Code (2003), similarly popularized
conspiracy theories about secret societies and the Church for a larger
audience. The more contemporary TV-series like 24 (2001-2010),
Homeland (2011-present) and House of Cards (2013-present) all play
with the themes of conspiracy theories: political intrigues,
government cover ups, clandestine operations by secret services and
so on. In sum, the logic and rhetoric of conspiracy features abundantly
in today’s media culture and has, as such, helped institutionalize
conspiracy theories as a broad based cultural phenomenon.
Yet, despite this popularization and normalization of
conspiracy theories over the last two decades, strong moral opinions
and normative judgements towards the subject matter remain
prevalent. The notion of the conspiracy theorist as an obsessive, petty
minded, militant and paranoid loner is widespread. The belief that
conspiracy theories will do harm is just as common: they are seen as
dangerously delusional ideas that pose serious threats to Western
democracies. To give an example of this moral presumption towards
conspiracy theories, I will go back to the Paris attacks, because just as
conspiracy theories can be expected to proliferate after such an event,
so too are the newspaper articles alarmingly reporting about the spread
of conspiracy theories in our societies. This “important piece”, as
another of my sources wrote to me by email, appeared a few days
after the Paris attacks in one of the major Dutch newspapers, Het
Algemeen Dagblad:
2.1 Introduction
Now that I have introduced this sociological study of conspiracy
culture, I will discuss more precisely what I studied; my reasons for
selecting my sources; and how I gathered and analyzed the empirical
material. Although these are methodological matters, the following
elaboration of the places, events, and people that are part of my
research contains significant empirical information about
contemporary (Dutch) conspiracy theorists, and is therefore
informative for those without prior knowledge of this subculture.
3.1 Introduction
Given the contemporary ubiquity of conspiracy theories, most people
have an idea of what they are. Some would speak of 9/11 and the
widespread suspicions of the official account, while others would talk
about the assassinations of important figures like John F. Kennedy.
But conspiracy theories come in many shapes and sizes. The sheer
scope of conspiracy theories warrant a more thorough exposition. In
this chapter, I will therefore explore in greater detail the many
conspiracy theories that circulate in the Dutch conspiracy milieu. It
is, however, not my intention to provide a complete overview of all
conspiracy theories out there; others have already made such attempts
(cf. McConnachie and Tudge, 2008; Lewis, 2008; Vankin and
Whalen, 2010). Neither is it my intention to identify certain
rhetorical characteristics or epistemological tropes inherent to all
conspiracy theories. These quests to find “the nature of conspiracy
belief” (Barkun, 2006) or to dissect “the anatomy of the conspiracy
theory” (Byford, 2011) are informed by essentialist notions of the
conspiracy theory, the problems of which have been addressed in the
introduction. Instead, I would like to provide a systematic
categorization of the conspiracy theories popular today so to clarify
the body of knowledge that I refer to when I speak of conspiracy
theories in the chapters that follow.
There are many ways to do so. An often-applied criterion in
academic studies to categorize conspiracy theories is plausibility.60 As
the introduction showed, scholars often distinguish real from false
conspiracy theories, albeit in many different ways (e.g. Bale, 2007;
Byford, 2011; Keeley, 1999; Pipes, 1997; Sunstein and Vermeule,
2009). Others categorize conspiracy theories by scope. Pipes, for
example, separates “petty” from “world” conspiracy theories: the
former are “limited in ambition, however dangerous in consequence”
whereas “world conspiracies aspire to global power and to disrupt the
very premises of human life.… [T]he unwarranted belief that rivals
are at work ganging up on you is a petty conspiracy theory; fear of
Jews’ or Freemasons’ trying for global power is a world conspiracy
theory” (1997: 21-2). Michael Barkun distinguishes three types in
ascending order: “event”, “systemic” and “superconspiracies” (2006:
6). The first refers to conspiracy theories about a single event like the
Kennedy assassination or the attacks of 9/11. Systemic conspiracies have
sweeping goals, like world domination, but refer to a rather simple
notion of cabals: the Jews, the Freemasons, the Communists, the
Capitalists. Superconspiracies are those in which all other conspiracies
come together in one nested framework of conspiracy, where “at the
summit of the conspiratorial hierarchy a distant but all powerful evil
force” (2006: 6). David Icke’s reptilian theory, which will be further
discussed in the next chapter, is a clear example of the latter.
In contrast to the more common categorizations of scope and
plausibility, which I believe are too general and too much guided by
the need to discredit conspiracy theories, I will discern conspiracy
theories here by their thematic content. This emphasis on thematic
content, on meaning instead of truth, follows logically from the
cultural sociological approach that I take. The guiding question of this
analysis is a simple one: what precisely are contemporary conspiracy
theories about? What do these narratives of collusion and deceit look
like? Who are the figures that are (allegedly) involved, how do the
conspiracies work, and what, generally speaking, is their argument?
The source of the data I use for this content analysis is the repository
of articles housed on Dutch conspiracy websites. These materials
provide an empirically-grounded selection of the narratives that are
most popular today. Following the definitional approach to my
research object, I selected those websites labelled as conspiracy
websites both by people inside the milieu and by (critical) outsiders
(see section 2.2). I will explore the variety of contemporary
conspiracy theories with a theoretical argument in mind related to the
specificity of the historical context. This is the premise that
contemporary conspiracy culture has radically changed: from the
scapegoating of an exotic Other, to a more diffuse suspiciousness
about enemies from within (cf. Goldberg, 2001; Knight, 2000;
Aupers, 2012; Melley, 2000, Olmsted, 2009).
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt
of in your philosophy.
—William Shakespeare, Hamlet212
In addition to all the conspiracy narratives about rather mundane
matters, a great part of these conspiracy websites is devoted to the
secrets of the universe. These websites abound with articles on
extraterrestrial life, supernatural phenomena, and mysterious
civilizations. Such explorations of the mysteries of nature, life, and
divinity are generally rejected by the scientific community as
pseudoscience, but are nevertheless widely popular in conspiracy
circles. Barkun argues that the “stigmatization” or exclusion from the
mainstream canon of accepted knowledge is in fact a big part of their
appeal (2006: 26-9). This “disdain for orthodoxy,” according to
Barkun, “is a major characteristic of the culture of conspiracy” (2006:
26), and he connects it as such with the “cultic milieu” (Campbell,
2002) and the New Age Movement (Heelas, 1996). Ward and Voas
give this “hybrid of conspiracy theory and alternative spirituality” the
name “conspirituality,” and they explore the emergence of this
“politico-spiritual philosophy” that combines both as “forms of holistic
thought” (2011: 103-4). Many websites discussing matters of the
supernatural may indeed incorporate and promote a spiritual
worldview, but I have found that the opposite is also true, as other
sites explicitly position themselves in favor of a purely scientific
approach. Both, however, share an interest in life beyond human
existence on Earth. The range of these articles is immense, but I will
highlight here some of these supernatural narratives that tend to be
favored within the Dutch conspiracy milieu.
Almost all of the conspiracy websites that I studied start from
the assumption that humans are not alone in the universe, and that
there is more to know about extraterrestrial life than we are being
told.213 The reasons for this cover-up obviously vary considerably, but
most explanations go back to the early days of the cold war, in which
the US was caught up in an arms race with Russia “to benefit solely
from the extraterrestrial technologies found inside the crashed UFO’s
in New Mexico and Arizona. It is no exaggeration to state what a
quantum leap in technological progress that would mean. And so
‘national security’ demanded that this matter was kept a secret at all
costs […] and the most secretive project of the millennium was
born.”214 Things are changing today, these websites hold, as “there is
now an impressive case load gathered of how NASA is withholding
information [but] official UFO-files are being released around the
world, and many more whistleblowers who claim to have been part
of projects with aliens come out in the open.”215 Such articles refer to
the disclosures of Bob Lazar who has allegedly been working as a
scientist on the reverse engineering of ET technology at the
primordial grounds of UFO cover-ups, Area 51.216 Or, per the
statements of Apollo 14 astronaut and 6th man on the moon Edgar
Mitchell, “aliens have contacted humans several times, but
governments have hidden the truth for sixty years.”217 Other
revelations by knowledgeable figures such as high-government
officials from both the USSR and the USA, add to the conclusion that
extraterrestrial life is real. If we follow, for example, the disclosures
of former Canadian minister of Defense, it is more than real: “1960’s
intelligence investigations decided that, with absolute certainty, there
are at least four species that have been visiting this planet for
thousands of years [...] but the latest reports say there at about 80
different species.”218
These conspiracy narratives about extraterrestrial life,
however, go further than NASA cover ups and insider testimonies .
Articles describe, for example, OOPArts (Out Of Place Artefacts),
which are “historical objects found in illogical or impossible locations
and therefore directly challenge commonly accepted historical
assumptions.”219 Although not directly related to extraterrestrial life,
their unusual characteristics challenge historical chronology by being
too advanced for the location where they are found, such as “a
hammer found in rocks over 100 million years old.”220 These
“OOPArts suggest an alternative course of civilization than we always
assumed,”221 and give rise to speculations about the existence of “a
forbidden history”222 of lost civilizations (like Atlantis), giant mythical
creatures (such as the Nephilim), and ancient aliens (called
Annunaki).223 Although mainstream science is generally skeptical
about such assertions, these articles argue instead that “the scientific
community has no sufficient explanation for the highly advanced
knowledge of mathematics and astronomy the Sumerians, the
Egyptians and the Middle- and South American Indians possessed.”224
The alternative histories of the earth in which extraterrestrial events
play a significant role, e.g. the works of Erich Von Däniken (especially
Chariots of the Gods), Immanuel Velikovksy (Worlds in Collision) and
Zecharia Sitchin (The Twelfth Planet), do provide such explanations and
are widely popular in the conspiracy milieu.225 Following such works,
the “conclusion is reached that our DNA is implanted with alien
genes,”226 and that “aliens are involved in the evolution of the human
species.”227 The mysteries of the universe and of life itself, these
articles conclude, are only beginning to be known.
Next to these explorations of extraterrestrial life, a
supernatural topic that receives considerable attention in the
conspiracy milieu is what is often called “the mystery of
consciousness.”228 These articles start with the wonder and awe of the
phenomenon of consciousness, and ask “why are we the only species
with consciousness? Where does it come from? And why have we
never seen it with any other living species on earth?”229 In contrast to
materialist scientific conceptions of consciousness as an illusionary
product of the mind,230 in which human mental faculties are
understood as an evolutionarily-developed epiphenomenon of brain
functions, many of these websites concur that this is too limited of a
perspective that cannot adequately explain how “consciousness
continues to exist when the brain is completely inactive, for example
in a coma.”231 Such articles not only cite the works of
(pseudo)scientists Rupert Sheldrake and Graham Hancock, who
explore the non-material dimensions of reality,232 as well as other
spiritual teachings on the soul and eternal consciousness,233 but
increasingly feature scientific research on supernatural phenomena.
Authors draw focus to medical research on near death experiences,234
and argue that ‘these experiences cannot be dismissed as imaginations
of a dying person [but] may point to the existence of another reality
[…] and the possibility of life after death.’235 With titles such as
Scientists find proof for life after death,236 and Solid scientific proof:
consciousness after clinical death,237 these articles make clear that
“scientists are changing their views: the brain does NOT create
consciousness.”238 They contend that “misleading concepts focusing
on reductive materialism have kept us in the dark about the true
nature of the human soul, but now we are entering a phase in which
science will greatly expand its boundaries […] and reach out to the
greater cosmos of life.”239 In line with articles that argue for a view
beyond the materialist paradigm, these websites similarly delve into
paranormal phenomena like extrasensory perception, remote
viewing, and telepathy. These “refer to any kind of phenomenon
where someone obtains information in ways not coming from the five
physical senses.”240 Just like experimental research on consciousness,
such articles argue that “studies on extrasensory perception are
generally marginalized,” but “parapsychologists have nevertheless
shown the existence of ESP in 108 publications between 1974 and
2008.”241 Special attention is paid to Project Stargate, a CIA-funded
study on psychic phenomena at the Stanford Research Institute,
where physicists in the 1970s and 80s explored whether clairvoyance
existed and whether extrasensory perception made remote viewing
possible.242 One of these websites even translated extensive parts of
the autobiography of Ingo Swann, one of the psychics who, with Uri
Geller, was centrally involved with this project.243 The CIA officially
stopped funding the project in the nineties because it never yielded
any useful results, although these websites question such a conclusion,
surmising that “remote viewing is undoubtedly still deployed behind
the scenes.”244 “Who knows,” they wonder, “if in secret much more
has been achieved by now?”245
These conspiracy websites are often sympathetic to the
supernatural. Whether they speak about the existence of
extraterrestrial life, delve into the mysterious histories of lost
civilizations, or hold that human consciousness is a portal to different
realities, their point is that there is more to life here on earth than we
commonly think. Such ignorance is not a coincidence, such websites
argue, but the active result of the covert actions of groups like NASA,
the CIA, governments, or the broader scientific community, all of
whom hide proof of supernatural phenomena from the public and
reject such ideas as illusionary. Theirs is a vision of epistemic
gatekeepers who repress and stigmatize knowledge when it points in
the direction of the supernatural. Barkun argues in this respect that
“the marginalization of such claims by the institutions that
conventionally distinguish between knowledge and error –
universities, communities of researchers, and the like” would be, for
most people, a signal that such ideas have no validity (2006: 26). For
conspiracy theorists, however, this practice raises suspicion: why are
the boundaries of legitimate inquiry put here and not there? The
theoretically fascinating thing about these conspiracy narratives is
therefore not so much that two worldviews come together (Ward and
Voas, 2011), but rather that they (try to) redefine the boundaries of
legitimate knowledge, and indeed of science. We could denounce
such “opposition to dominant cultural orthodoxies” as Barkun does
(2006: 26), or we could empirically study why people contest and
defend these orthodoxies, and how the lines between official and
stigmatized knowledge are drawn (cf. Gordin, 2012; Hess, 1993;
Pinch, 1979). My overall premise is to justify the latter approach, and
a modest effort in that direction is made towards the end of this
dissertation when I study how conspiracy theorists and their scientific
debunkers draw their own lines of legitimate inquiry.
4.1 Introduction
In the last chapter I assessed some of the most persistent categories of
conspiracy theories that I observed in my research: critical views of
the media landscape, worries about the far-reaching arms of the state,
and beliefs in extraterrestrial beings and lost civilizations. Despite this
broad spectrum of conspiracy theories, I have argued that a focus on
the workings of mainstream epistemic institutions and their dominant
role in everyday life is what unites these different types. More than
mere explanations of events involving the covert action of a malicious
cabal (e.g. Coady, 2006; Sunstein and Vermeule, 2009),
contemporary conspiracy theories are critical analyses of institutional
regimes that are often not a far cry from more authoritative forms of
knowledge (such as social scientific analyses). A second characteristic
I have brought to the fore is how these conspiracy theories usually
point to the people overseeing these institutions as being the culprits
behind their corruption. The gamut of conspiracy theories may be
about vastly different domains, but they all assign a global power elite
as the dangerous Other threatening social order.
In fact, these seemingly-distinct conspiracy theories are
sometimes synthesized into a single vast scheme of manipulation,
what Barkun calls superconspiracies (2006: 6). Barkun stresses the
increasing popularity of such vast constructs: “superconspiracies have
enjoyed particular growth since the 1980s” (2006: 6). Knight
identifies a similar historical development: “over the last decades
conspiracy theories have shown signs of increasing complexity and
inclusiveness, as once separate suspicions are welded into Grand
Unified Theories of Everything” (2000: 204). Moving beyond
discussions of their actual truthfulness, I explore in this chapter how
these superconspiracy theories are made plausible instead. One of the
main and most popular propagators of such all-encompassing
conspiracies of deceit is the flamboyant David Icke (Barkun, 2006:
103). He is best known for his controversial reptilian thesis, in which
“reptilian human-alien hybrids are in covert control of the planet”
(Robertson, 2013: 28). But he is also known for his synthesis of
seemingly different or antithetical thought: he combines New Age
teachings with apocalyptic conspiracy theories about a coming
totalitarian New World Order (cf. Barkun, 2006; Ward and Voas,
2011). Lewis and Kahn rightfully note, “Icke’s greatest strength is his
totalizing ambition to weave numerous sub-theories into an
extraordinary narrative that is both all-inclusive and all-accounting”
(2005: 8). In this chapter I analyze his discursive strategies of legitimation
based, especially, on Icke’s 2011 performance in Amsterdam. I
sought to understand just how he supports and validates his
extraordinary claims in order to achieve epistemic authority in the
conspiracy milieu.
4.2 Claiming Epistemic Authority
The conviction that everything is connected is, according to most
scholars on the subject, one of the defining characteristics of
conspiracy theories. Knight regards it as “one of the guiding principles
of conspiracy theory” (2000: 204), Hofstadter as one of “the basic
elements of the paranoid style” (1996: 29), and Barkun as “one of the
principles found in virtually every conspiracy theory” (2006: 3). The
wide variety of conspiracy theories we have explored in the previous
chapter, including extraterrestrial ancestries and pharmaceutical
collusions, is often welded together into one vast scheme in which
everything is connected. While Knight makes a case for the rationality
of this adage in a world of global relations (2000: 204-241), a majority
of scholars hold this unifying quality of contemporary conspiracy
theories to be their major epistemological flaw (e.g. Barkun, 2006;
Byford, 2011; Hofstadter, 1996; Keeley, 1999, Popper, 2013;
Pigden, 1995). They argue that conspiracies may be “typical social
phenomena” (Popper, 2013: 307) but “these need to be recognized as
multiple, and in most instances unrelated events which cannot be
reduced to a single, common denominator” (Byford, 2011: 33,
original emphasis). They state that to “regard a ‘vast’ or ‘gigantic’
conspiracy as the motive force in historical events” (Hofstadter, 1996:
29) is simply ludicrous: social life is inextricably more complex
(Barkun, 2006: 7).
Yet such grand, unified theories are immensely popular in the
conspiracy milieu. They are present in the ideas of people consuming
conspiracy theories, they are visualized in colorful diagrams that are
circulated on conspiracy websites, and they form the thought of major
conspiracy theorists like Icke. Drawing everything together in one
master narrative may, for such scholars, involve the notorious “big
leap from the undeniable to the unbelievable” (Hofstadter, 1996: 38),
but for many in the conspiracy milieu this the other way around. As
David Icke argues in his show, “when you connect the dots, suddenly
the light goes on and the picture forms” (15:00). The opposite
strategy of assuming events to be unrelated, which is often called the
coincidence theory247 is seen as naïve and implausible. Scholars of
conspiracy theories may point to the irrationality of these
superconspiracy theories, but for many people in the conspiracy
milieu they are very plausible and real. What these scholars tend to
gloss over in their dedication to debunk conspiracy theories is the fact
that these overarching theories need to be made plausible if they are to
have any legitimacy. Underlying conspiracy theorists’ efforts to
connect the seemingly-unrelated is a need for epistemic validation:
they want their claims on truth to be believed, after all. But such grand
unified theories of everything are not your everyday news: in them, the
world as we know it is often turned upside down and inside out,
connecting the most outlandish causes and effects to ordinary
experiences of people. The question is therefore how do conspiracy
theorists convincingly sell such ostensibly unbelievable theories?
Sociology has a history of studying the ways that people assert
themselves as authoritative in making appeals to truth claims. Max
Weber (2013) already pointed out that one can claim authority
through charisma, tradition or, in modern societies in particular,
through rationalized, juridical systems and procedures like the law
(cf. Hammer, 2001). In the Western world, references to science and
its systematic markers of truth are, however, the most prevalent and
powerful way to lend credibility to the claims one is making (Brown,
2009). “If ‘science’ says so, we are more often than not inclined to
believe it or act on it – and prefer it over claims lacking this epistemic
seal of approval” (Gieryn, 1999: 1). The tremendous epistemic
authority science enjoys today is, however, not uncontested: trust in
science has gradually declined in most Western countries (cf.
Achterberg et al., 2015, Beck, 1992; Inglehart, 1997). Other forms
of knowledge and expertise are on the rise, such as alternative and
complementary medicine, non-scientific nutritional regimes, and
New Age philosophies of life (cf. Campbell, 2007; Hammer, 2001;
Heelas, 1996). Conspiracy culture aligns well with a broader cultural
trend that turns away from mainstream epistemic authorities. Not
only do conspiracy theorists openly challenge the epistemic authority
of science (Harambam and Aupers, 2015), but, like David Icke
himself, they often advance other epistemic sources as more authentic
and authoritative. Icke is therefore not just the archetype of the
contemporary superconspiracy theorist (cf. Barkun, 2006: 8; Knight,
2000: 204), but a typical proponent of the broader cultural
movement discontented with mainstream societal institutions (i.e.
science, politics, religion, media, etc.).
4.4 “The Day That Will Change Your Life”250: David Icke in
Amsterdam
David Icke is a true conspiracy celebrity: he holds performances in
large venues all over the world, attracting crowds of thousands, and
has published more than twenty books in twelve different languages.
He founded and runs a popular website with many videos and
interviews, which maintains an active discussion platform with more
than 100,000 registered users.251 Icke manages to bring together an
unlikely range of people (Barkun, 2006; Ward and Voas, 2009). As
Lewis and Kahn argue: “Icke appeals equally to bohemian hipsters and
right-wing reactionary fanatics [who] are just as likely to be sitting
next to a 60-something UFO buff, a Nuwaubian, a Posadist, a Raëlian,
or New Age earth goddess” (2005: 3). His fan base is, in other words,
quite diverse: including various new religious movements, political
anarchists, alternative healers, and anti-government militants from
the extreme right. All of them, however, share a discontent with the
current societal order, and specifically with the way our epistemic
institutions work.
Despite his massive popularity in the conspiracy milieu,
Icke’s views are hardly uncontested, nor is everything that he says
taken as fact. Being a celebrity in conspiracy circles means that one
can easily become the target of other conspiratorial accusations. Alex
Jones, another major U.S.-based conspiracy celebrity, recognizes that
Icke has “good information” but calls him the “turd in the punch
bowl,” arguing that Icke discredits himself (and others) by “poisoning
the well” with outlandish claims of alien shapeshifting races.252 Jones,
as a result, has been accused “by dozens of reliable colleagues in the
truth movement as being a Judas Goat,” collaborating with the enemy
to “lead the herd into slaughterhouses.”253 Being “the world's two
most popular conspiracy theorists,” both Icke and Jones are
considered by others in the milieu as major “disinformation agents”
and part of the “controlled opposition working directly with the
government/corporate powers that be.”254 Despite critiques and
suspicions, Icke remains a major player in the conspiracy world, and
as such enjoys much (epistemic) authority and consent. He may not
be believed in all that he says, but managing to remain “on stage” for
over twenty years means that his fan base is both large and loyal in
support of his opposition to the cultural mainstream.
Such support was apparent at his 2011 Amsterdam
performance in the auditorium of the RAI convention center. He
attracted a 1500-plus person crowd each of whom paid for a sixty-
nine euro ticket to see him speak. It is a full day’s program, from ten
in the morning until seven in the evening, during which time, Icke
promised, he would “put all the puzzle pieces together” (13.30). The
attendees included fathers on a day out with their teenage sons, posh-
looking couples in their thirties talking over coffee, working class men
smoking rolled cigarettes outside, and groups of middle-aged women
exploring the New Age bookstands that are provisionally set up in the
hallways. Outside, a Christian man was handing out leaflets in
protest, warning that the “New Age prophet” is the “anti-Christ.”
Inside, I spoke to people about Icke and heard about their motivations
for coming here today: some are true followers and have read all of
his books, others share his critique of the contemporary order but are
at odds with his spiritual leanings; some hardly know him but were
brought along by a friend. Indeed, diversity of people and (epistemic)
positions abound.
The show opened on a large video screen showing a chain of
iron links passing while we hear gloomy and grim music that increases
in intensity. The chain wraps around the earth and each link has
writing on it: “New World Order,” “Rothshild Zionism” “Child
Abuse”, “Babylonian Brotherhood,” “Bilderbergers,” “Aspartame,”
“Religion,” Club of Rome,” “Chemtrails,” “Fluoride,” “HAARP,”
“Satanism,” “Trilateral Commission,” “Mainstream Media,” “Fabian
Society,” “Intelligence agencies,” “IMF,” “World Army,” “Police
State,” “Global Politics,” “Big Pharma,” “War on Terror,” “Vaccines,”
“Tavistock,” “Military/Industrial Complex,” “War on Drugs,” “Mind
Control.” As the music became ominous, a lion with an image of the
earth projected onto its skin, is shown bound in chains. The music
reached its dramatic climax as the lion breaks out of his bondage and
while he growls loudly the links fly about the screen. The message is
clear: The lion sleeps no more, the world liberates itself. Primed by
the video, the audience received Icke with an overwhelming applause.
The conspiracy rock star is finally here.
Over the next seven hours, Icke passionately elaborated what
he sees as “the elephant in the living room: that there is a multi-
levelled conspiracy to enslave humanity in a global concentration
camp” (15:30). Before I explore his strategies of legitimation in more
empirical detail, it will be useful to provide here a succinct summary
of what Icke’s superconspiracy theory entails. Broadly speaking, he
distinguished between “the five-sense level of this conspiracy” and the
levels that transcend the here-and-now. The five-sense level of his
grand, unified theory of everything sums up what has been described
in the previous chapter: Icke speaks widely about the corruption of
inherent in modern institutions. Media, science, politics, religion,
and the rest are used as a “control system” to manipulate the way we
experience reality, to “program our minds” into acquiescence (19:00-
25:00). He discussed how these institutions are dogmatic and inward-
looking: “politics, science, education and media. They all stand on the
same postage stamp. And anyone who wants to step off it and explore
another area is ridiculed and condemned” (31:00). Icke integrates all
of these different institutions in one pyramidal view of society in
which the centralization of power is the organizing principle
(3:36:00). At the top of this pyramid, which is visualized as an
illustration, resides the cabal who are leading us into a global
totalitarian control state. The cabal is described as a network of secret
societies and powerful families, sometimes captured under the phrase
“Illuminati bloodlines” and at other times called “Rothschild Zionists.”
But, Icke explained, this is mere surface, since “there is this other-
dimensional, non-human, level to look at” (1:41:00).
We now get to the “reptilian thesis” through which Icke
gained his fame and notoriety (Barkun, 2006: 105). “So yes,” Icke
explained, “of course on one level [the conspiracy] manifests itself as
dark men sitting in suits around the table, but that’s not its origin, it
goes beyond them, out of this dimension […] beyond the frequency
range of visible light” (1:43:00). His theory “involves non-human
entities that take a reptilian form [that] manipulate this reality through
interbreeding bloodlines” (1:44:00), which become the Illuminati-
hybrid family networks that rule the world. However normal they
may look to us (Hillary Clinton, George W. Bush, Tony Blair, Barack
Obama, Queen Elizabeth) they are in fact controlled by an “an
ethereal reptilian entity locking into their chakra points” (1:55:30).
Sometimes these entities give themselves away and “this shift can
happen where the reptilian field comes forward, and then shifts back.
To our observation then, someone has gone from a human to a
reptilian and then back to a human again” (2:23:00). This is what he
famously calls “shape-shifting.” As an explanation for their “evil”
activities, Icke argued that “their hybrid DNA has eliminated empathy
– the fail-safe mechanism of all behavior” (1:53:30), “and this lack of
empathy explains why these guys do what they do” (2:07:00).
Throughout his show, Icke made it abundantly clear that “the
road to tyranny began when these reptilian arrived here, before that
the world was very different” (2:23:00). He sketched an image of a
time long ago when people lived in harmony with the world around
them and were connected to higher levels of consciousness. “And then
there was a sudden change,” Icke explained, when “an energetic
schism at the level of the metaphysical universe” fundamentally
altered life on earth “and we became distorted from the magnificence
and harmony we were before” (1:49:00). Our DNA was changed
because of this reptilian intervention so that we can no longer access
the world beyond the five senses. We merely “operate through the
reptilian brain,” which keeps us in a continuous survival mode of fear
and aggression (3:10:00). And this is part of the conspiracy: “they
want to lock humanity in the five senses, so we don’t perceive beyond
it, we are locked in that prison.” (3:27:30).
This prison refers to “the nature of reality itself” (17:00), and
it is of prime importance, Icke argued, because “what the control
system doesn’t want us to know is that this reality—the one we think
we are experiencing now—is an illusion!” (31:00). Icke proposed
that “the world we think we are experiencing outside of us, is
[actually] inside of us. We are creating it.” (43:00) Everything around
us is, according to Icke, our own individual projection of the
“metaphysical universe,” “eternal consciousness,” or what he often
referred to as the “waveform base reality” (34:00). Pointing to his
head, Icke said that “it’s all going on in here” (36:00). This projection
is, however, not entirely our own as “the control system is
manipulating 24/7 the way that we decode reality” (32:30), because
when “you can’t control millions physically, you have to control the
way they perceive themselves and the world” (21:00). Mainstream
institutions play an important part in making these “prisons for our
minds” (19:00-25:00), but Icke pointed to another method of mass
mind-control: “the moon-matrix.” He argued that the moon is
actually a hollowed out planetoid brought here by these reptilian
entities, which is most probably the cause of the energetic schism, and
emits a frequency which distorts our interpretation of reality
(2:30:00-3:08:00). And that is “the bottom line of this conspiracy”:
controlling our perception of what is possible and real so to enslave
us while we believe ourselves to be free (3:18:00).
But a change is going to come, Icke told us optimistically
toward the end of the show, “a totally new era is in the process of
moving into human experience,” a “new epoch of enlightenment and
expansion, of love, harmony and respect” (5:12:00). His argument is
that an “energetic change is coming,” and that “truth vibrations” are
going “to wake people up from this slumber” and ultimately “heal the
schism” (5:03:00-5:23:00). And “it’s going to be extraordinary,” we
are told; “we are going to emerge from the abyss—the suppression
and all the rest of it—and remember the fantastic potential that
humans once were and be who we really are” (5:25:30). In order to
open ourselves to these “truth vibrations” and to “go down this road
of freedom, we first need to free our minds from the programming
of a lifetime,” Icke urged us passionately. We need to unlearn what
we were told in school, school being a primary mode of
indoctrination:
It is not there to enlighten us, it’s there to program us with a certain
perception of reality which we carry through our lives so we will be
good little slaves. Free our minds from the belief that the mainstream
media is interested in telling people the truth about what is going on
in the world! It’s there to do the opposite! It is there to tell us the
version of reality the control systems wants us to believe, so we will
respond and react the right way. Free our minds from the fake
“change” politics [we are offered]! Free our minds from the fake
fraudulent false flag terrorist events! Free our minds from the idea
that Big Pharma is in any way interested in human health, it’s not
about human health, it’s about Big Pharma wealth! Free our mind
from the fear that controls the world! Free our minds, more than
anything else, from the idea that we are just ‘Joe Public,’ that we got
no power. The choice is to become conscious! (25:00)
Icke urged the audience “to remove the barriers of belief and
perception that keep us from enlightenment” (5:27:00) “Enough!”
Icke shouted as he brought the show to its end, “it is time to fly!”
(6:42:00). Given the massive applause Icke received, his audience
seemed ready for it.
Icke’s superconspiracy theory merges stories of banking
scandals and institutional corruption with theories about the
supernatural potential of humankind and globalized networks of
hybrid reptilian bloodlines. And yet all is put in one surprisingly
cohesive narrative which captures his audience’s attention for hours.
In the following sections, I will show which cultural sources of
epistemic authority Icke draws on to make his extraordinary
conspiracy theory of everything plausible.
4.5 Conclusion
David Icke brings the heavens and Earth together in one extraordinary
master narrative of banking scams, multidimensional universes,
reptilian races, and institutional forms of mind-control. During the
seven hours in which he connects the dots, Icke taps a multitude of
epistemic sources to convince his audience that the unbelievable is
indeed undeniable. His claims to truth are a hodgepodge of discursive
strategies of legitimation: he draws on personal experience, perennial
narratives in ancient cultures, futuristic imageries, and science and
critical social theory to support his superconspiracy theory. And as
with Hammer’s spokespersons of the esoteric tradition, these
‘discursive strategies seldom appear in splendid isolation’ (2001: 45).
Indeed, they follow each other in remarkable speed, and without
hesitation. Some academics may find this eclecticism problematic and
deplore how such charlatans unsettle the boundaries between fact and
fiction, or warn of the political and cultural ramifications of a world
that succumbs to relativism (e.g. Barkun, 2006; Pipes, 1997; Sunstein
and Vermeule, 2009). But this sort of critique from a positivistic
stance does little to help understand Icke’s enormous popularity from
a cultural sociological perspective. Based on this analysis, I develop
two sociological explanations here as to why Icke’s epistemological
pluralism—drawing from different sources of knowledge—only adds
to the plausibility of his superconspiracy theory. These hypotheses
about the cultural reception of superconspiracy theories suggest new
routes for further research.
First, I contend that Icke is attractive for epistemological
omnivores, people who afford credibility to multiple sources of
knowledge in their search for the truth. Although science may be the
most commanding epistemic authority (cf. Gieryn, 1999; Brown,
2009), it faces today decreasing levels of trust and confidence in its
ability to deliver reliable and truthful knowledge about the world (cf.
Achterberg et al., 2015; Beck, 1992; Inglehart, 1997). To be sure,
science is still regarded with great esteem, but it has no monopoly on
truth. Epistemological purists may believe there is only one superior
way to arrive at good knowledge or the truth, epistemological omnivores
find this strict reliance on one system of knowledge suspect and argue
that it makes more sense to complement it with other sources, such
as tradition, experience, fictional narratives, and imageries. Icke
clearly thinks the same, or at least he believes this strategy of
epistemological pluralism to be most opportune when claiming
knowledge. If science alone cannot explain it all, for whatever
reasons, the best one can do is to draw from a multitude of epistemic
sources (cf. Lyotard, 1984). That is, at least, what epistemological
omnivores would say. In a culture wary of dominant epistemic
institutions and their sole reliance on science as the pathway to truth,
Icke’s bricolage of many different sources of knowledge may therefore
find much resonance.
However, Icke’s eclecticism may not just serve the
epistemological omnivores; his superconspiracy theory would appeal
equally to different social groups, each with distinct worldviews and
lifestyles. Many scholars have pointed to the fact that Icke manages to
bring together a diverse range of people, from leftist spiritual seekers
to right wing reactionaries (e.g. Barkun, 2006; Lewis and Kahn,
2005; Ward and Voas, 2009). This is confirmed by my own
observations and interviews in the field. On the one hand, I found
many spiritual seekers in the conspiracy milieu who might be
particularly fascinated by Icke’s appeal to personal experience and
ancient mythologies. After all, such sources of knowledge are at the
core of modern esotericism, New Age spiritualties, and the cultic
milieu generally (cf. Campbell, 2002; Hammer, 2001; Heelas,
1996). The references to science and technological imageries may, on
the other hand, attract quite another audience, like amateur-
scientists, technicians, hackers, and fans of the science fiction genre.
And what about the references to critical social science, are these
narratives particularly appealing to social activists or neo-Marxists
fighting an unfair social system of modern alienation, stratification,
and globalization? My second suggestion, then, is that Icke’s reliance
on multiple sources of knowledge attracts distinctly different
audiences. His text is highly polysemic: each follower can extract from
all the different ingredients of his superconspiracy theory a particular
narrative that resonates with her own social identity and subjective
reasoning. In short, I argue that Icke’s epistemological pluralism
strengthens the plausibility and explains the popularity of his
superconspiracy theory, but whether it predominantly attracts the
epistemological omnivores, or different social groups with distinct
epistemological preferences, or both, remains an open question for
further empirical research.
Icke’s epistemological pluralism should, however, not be
considered a strictly idiosyncratic enterprise, but has wider cultural
resonance. Many religious groups operating in today’s globalized
world have, for example, a similar type of syncretism, blending
different, often contradictory belief systems and schools of thought
into one coherent narrative (Stewart and Shaw, 1994). Such
epistemological pluralism is similarly characteristic of the cultic milieu
where it has been described as constituting a “common ideology of
seekership” (Campbell, 2002: 15). Likewise, many postmodern
religious movements pick-and-mix from different epistemic sources
such as film, books, mythologies, music, etc. to construct their holy
scriptures (e.g. Lyon, 2000; Possamai, 2005). Icke’s fusion of science
and tradition, folklore and futurism is also found outside the domain
of religiosity as it reminiscent of the many pastiches in the arts and
culture (cf. Jameson, 1991; Best and Kellner, 1997). In all these
ways, it is hard to set Icke’s epistemological pluralism aside as a
deviant and eccentric way of claiming knowledge, since it aligns well
with many contemporary cultural trends that unsettle stable
boundaries between different categories of knowledge.
5. Breaking Out of the Matrix:
How People Explain Their
Biographical Turn to Conspiracy
Theories
5.1 Introduction
With the rapid popularization of conspiracy theories in the last twenty
years, the question of why people today adhere so strongly to these
alternative explanations of reality acquires considerable urgency.
From all corners, academic scholars provide explanations of the
contemporary appeal of conspiracy theories. Broadly speaking, there
are three overarching arguments embedded in their particular
research traditions, but none pays much empirical and conceptual
attention to those people who are actually engaging with conspiracy
theories. For a first and rather dominant strand of research that draws
on the early works of Popper (2013) and Hofstadter (1996),
conspiracy theories are the delusional ideas of (more or less) paranoid
minds (e.g. Barkun, 2006; Byford, 2011; Pipes, 1997; Robins and
Post, 1997; Sunstein and Vermeule, 2009). As these scholars a priori
dismiss conspiracy theories as irrational and dangerous forms of
thought, not much conceptual leeway is given to the motivations and
reasons people might have for engaging with them. They are, bluntly
put, mentally disturbed. Out of a dissatisfaction with these morally-
tainted, psychopathological accounts, some scholars have sought to
understand the popularity of conspiracy theories by relating them to
the uncertainties of living in globalized, risk-saturated societies, and
argue that “the idea of conspiracy offers an odd sort of comfort in an
uncertain age” (Melley, 2000: 8, cf. Fenster, 1999; Knight, 2000;
Marcus, 1999). These cultural explanations may be more compelling,
but as engagements with conspiracy theories become some sort of
coping mechanism with a monolithic postmodern condition, they
similarly gloss over and exclude the diversity of motivations,
concerns, and experiences that usually underpin those engagements.
Finally, despite their valuable theoretical contribution, the more
Foucauldian analyses of Birchall (2006) and Bratich (2008) leave
almost no room for conspiracy theorists as living people, who instead
become discursive positions in contemporary regimes of truth, they
become “subjectivities” produced via discourses on conspiracy
theories.
In light of this humanistic lacuna, I want to bring the
conspiracy theorist back in as an embodied, reflexive, and social being
by putting her culturally embedded life at center stage. Instead of
understanding engagements with conspiracy theories as the result of
some psychological or cultural condition, I believe it is more fruitful
to take a biographical approach and study how people get involved
with conspiracy theories (cf. Plummer, 2001; Roberts, 2002). People
are not born conspiracy theorists, nor are they mere sufferers of our
times. Conspiracy theories, I argue here, come to make sense over
the course of people’s lives; they come to make sense in light of
people’s own experiences of being in the world. But how it happens
that people turn to conspiracy theories as explanations of reality that
are more plausible and sensible than those offered by epistemic
authorities is hitherto unexplored. Drawing on my field research, I
study in this chapter the stories people in the Dutch conspiracy milieu
shared, detailing how they got drawn to conspiracy theories. Instead
of a strict focus on objective truth and reality, I follow instead
people’s own (retrospective) understanding of how that process
unfolded subjectively. My interest lies in how they explain their
becoming a conspiracy theorist. I intend in this chapter to explain the
contemporary popularity of conspiracy theories from a sociological
perspective that is radically centered on the viewpoints and
experiences of the actual people who are turning to and perpetuating
conspiracy theories.
5.5. Conclusion
Because most explanations of the contemporary appeal of conspiracy
theories leave little space for the motivations of the real living beings
involved, I have made central in this chapter the culturally-embedded
lives of a sample of people who have turned to conspiracy theories.
Following a biographical methodological approach (Plummer, 2001;
Roberts, 2002), I asked people in the Dutch conspiracy milieu to
narrate their experience of becoming a conspiracy theorist, with a
focus on their personal motivations. I sought to understand what
specific moments in life they assigned as significant and meaningful in
their emerging engagements with conspiracy theories. Although such
autobiographical accounts are fictional in the sense that they are
retrospectively constructed narrative expressions of lived
experiences, I analyze them as “truthful fictions,” in that they are real
and meaningful to the people involved (Denzin, 1989). This is, after
all, how they reflect and think about their historically developed turn
towards conspiracy theories. In contrast to the formalism and micro-
sociological focus of an analytical model of the deviant career (Becker,
1963; Clinard and Meier, 2010; Faupel, 2011), I have argued for the
importance of historically contextualizing such biographical
trajectories. Following C. Wright Mills, who stresses the
fundamental relatedness of individual lives and larger societal
developments, I have focused on those instances where the private
troubles of these people meet the public issues of our societies to explain
the contemporary appeal of conspiracy theories (2000).
Although respondents draw on a culturally-shared awakening
narrative (cf. DeGloma, 2010), the analysis of their distinct life
stories showed more complexity and brought four cultural-historical
developments into relief. The first is secularization: dismayed by the
(ab)use of power by traditional religious authorities, many
respondents have left their churches behind, but still look for larger
frameworks of meaning and purpose that transcend the here and now.
Conspiracy theories that situate the more mundane analyses of
corruption and deceit in such narratives of supernatural existence and
occult folklore clearly provide for those needs. Second, mediatization:
how we experience and think of reality has radically changed in a
world where all kinds of media saturate everyday life. Respondents
spoke of the manipulative role media representations have in the
shaping of perceptions of reality and grapple with what is fact versus
what is fiction, even in their everyday lives. Thirdly, democratization:
this long historical process finds a contemporary expression in the
cultivation of a critical, literate, empowered citizenry, of which my
respondents are no exception. They draw on the knowledge acquired
in their education to challenge the truths put forward by the epistemic
authorities and to explain the plausibility of alternative theories. And
finally, globalization: the myriad opportunities to see and experience
the world from a different place and with different cultural lenses has
given rise to a cultural relativism that unsettles the stability of the
normal and opens the door to alternative explanations of reality, like
conspiracy theories.
In contrast to the majority of academic explanations that
explain conspiracy culture in uniform terms, I have shown that it is
sociologically more rewarding to explore the variety of reasons that
draw people to follow conspiracy theories—if only because
conspiracy theories mean different things, perform different
functions, and satisfy different needs, and do so for different people.
More specifically, I argue in this chapter that greater societal
developments taking shape in the private biographies of people best
explain the contemporary popularity of conspiracy theories, for the
simple reason that cultural change implies changing perceptions of
truth, knowledge, and power, thus changing an individual’s
perception of the plausibility of conspiracy theories. What is
remarkable, however, is that these connections between personal
experiences and larger societal developments are made not just by the
scholar, in this case myself, but by the interviewed people themselves.
Unlike those who see it as the “task and promise” of sociologists to
make these connections between the everyday lives of ordinary
people and the larger socio-cultural developments of which they are
part (Mills, 2000: 6, cf. Elias, 1978), my analysis shows that the
people we study themselves make such references to larger cultural
developments when they explain their own biographical trajectories.
Scholars may identify larger cultural processes over the backs of the
people they study, to put it crudely, but I highlight people’s own socio-
historical sense-making of the lives they lead and the choices they have
made. What C. Wright Mills famously coined the sociological
imagination (2000) is therefore not just an operating imperative for
social scientists, but seems part-and-parcel of how ordinary people
think and reflect about their historically developed and culturally
embedded lives.
On a more theoretical note, what do these four cultural
changes, which are tangible in the biographies of Dutch conspiracy
theorists, mean and signify sociologically? How do they explain the
contemporary appeal of conspiracy theories? It is my argument here
that all of these historical developments set in motion the dissolution
of a stable and absolute truth, which opens a cultural space for
conspiracy theories to thrive. Processes of secularization unsettle the
religious truths once held absolute, but as the metaphysical longings
of people remain, a wide variety of alternative spiritual truths are on
the rise instead. Mediatization speaks of a (digital) world where symbol
and reference, fact and fiction, are increasingly difficult to distinguish,
and what we think of as reality can be easily manipulated. The
democratization of knowledge cultivates a critical and reflexive habitus
that prompts people to continuously assess the truthfulness of all
knowledge claims and their bearers. And finally, globalization shows
how one’s own cultural truths are put in perspective when other
outlooks on the world are presented. The empirical consequence of
these four societal developments is that the truth is now out there. No
longer fully guaranteed by one epistemic authority, institution, or
tradition, the truth becomes something people actively grapple with
by searching, analyzing, deconstructing, and recomposing
information. In this cultural climate of what I call epistemic instability,
absolute truths become implausible. Conspiracy theories, on the
other hand, may be more convincing as they often do the opposite by
unsettling commonly accepted truths. Instead of deploring how these
societal developments have led to a situation where commonsense
distinctions between fact and fiction are blurred and truth is
increasingly on the table, like Barkun does (e.g. 2006: 33/179-181),
we should be content as (cultural) sociologists because there are just
many more ways of world-making and many more many battles for
epistemic authority to study.
6. “I Am Not a Conspiracy
Theorist” Relational
Identifications in the Dutch
Conspiracy Milieu
6.1 Introduction
When exploring the contemporary appeal of conspiracy theories, I
have argued in the last chapter for a contextual approach in order to
emphasize that the personal experiences of people are intricately
related to larger cultural-historical developments. If conspiracy
theories are not regarded as a pathological abnormality, then it only
makes sense to regard people’s engagements with them as situated
and developing in such cultural contexts. In a time and place where
the traditional epistemic authorities of religion, media, science, and
politics have been losing cultural legitimacy, conspiracy theories
come to make sense in relation to people’s everyday lives. Indeed, my
interviewees articulate the ways that their private troubles overlap
with the public issues of contemporary Western/European societies.
The previous chapter demonstrated already some variety of people
active in the Dutch conspiracy milieu, but here I set out to explore in
more detail the personal differences and similarities between these
people. My guiding question was this: who are the people actually
engaging with conspiracy theories, and more precisely, how do they
see themselves and others in the milieu?
A common view of the conspiracy theorist is an image of an
obsessive, paranoid, militant loner who sees fire at every instance of
smoke and finds coherence between seemingly random events.
Conspiracy theories may have become mainstream in contemporary
societies, but their normalization did not alter our cultural
imagination: the public image of the conspiracy theorist remains
morally tainted. As I show in the introduction, a minor newspaper
article on conspiracy theories perpetuates the image of the conspiracy
theorist as a petty-minded, insecure, socially disenfranchised,
distrusting, militant, and authoritarian; in short, a stubborn narcissist
looking for attention and control in a complex and unsettling world.
Academics have only contributed to this potent public image of a
conspiracy theorist. A dominant group of academics unambiguously
taps on and reproduces this pejorative image (Aaronovitch, 2010;
Barkun, 2006; Berlet, 2009; Byford, 2011; Pipes, 1997; Robins and
Post, 1997; Showalter, 1997; Sunstein and Vermeule, 2009). Knight
confirms that “the usual photofit picture of the conspiracy theorist is
an obsessive, petty minded right wing paranoid nut, a proponent of
extremist politics with a dangerous tendency to single out the usual
suspects as scapegoats” (2000: 3). Such pejorative images of
conspiracy theorists and their theories are not without their
consequences. Labelling someone a conspiracy theorist is an easy way
to “end a discussion” (Knight, 2000: 11). In other words, it is a
discursive strategy to disqualify an argument and to exclude the
speaker effectively from public debate, “no matter how true, false, or
conspiracy-related your utterance is. Using the phrase, I can
symbolically exclude you from the imagined community of
reasonable interlocutors” (Husting and Orr, 2007: 127).
Even though the diverse range of conspiracy theories (see
chapter 3) might already allude to the difficulty of conceiving of them
as a distinct social category, academic research has largely glossed
over diversity and ideological variation in the conspiracy milieu as
they construct conspiracy theorists as a coherent collective: internal
variety in the field is sacrificed for a clear, external demarcation. Even
those scholars who refute the moral alarmism in academic studies of
conspiracy theories and seek to explore their cultural meaning still
tend to portray conspiracy theorists as a single, homogenous group.
The paranoid is all too easily exchanged for the anomic. In recent
years, efforts have been made by political scientists and psychologists
to examine the demographic characteristics and personality traits of
those endorsing conspiracy theories (cf. Brotherton et al., 2013;
Oliver and Wood, 2014; Uscinsky and Parent, 2014; Wood and
Douglas, 2013). These quantitative studies go some way in explaining
the diversity of conspiracy theorists, but all construct analytical
categories in which conspiracy theorists are fit. By contrast, I open up
that uniform identity of the conspiracy theorist by empirically
studying people’s own self-understanding, and how they deal with that
pejorative image. In particular, I focus here on the different ways in
which people active in the Dutch conspiracy milieu make distinctions
between self and other: how do they associate with some and
disassociate from others? And consequently, what in- and outgroups
do they enact with these identifications?
In the study of identities it has long been argued that to
recognize similarity with some and differences with others is
fundamental to the formation of meaningful identities, and indeed, to
social life itself (cf. Cooley, 1902; Mead, 1934; Simmel, 1950). The
idea that identity is always and continuously constructed in relation
to meaningful others is a mainstay in symbolic interactionalist
sociology (cf. Becker, 1963; Calhoun, 1994; Elias 1978; Goffman,
1963; Jenkins, 2014). In the study of conspiracy culture, however,
this focus on identification and the mechanisms of in- and exclusion is
completely absent. This may also be the result of methodological
choices. The majority of studies on conspiracy theories analyze these
discourses on their own or in secondary sources such as films and
literature. By doing so, they fail to grasp the interactional context,
which would foreground the way that conspiracy theorists deal with
such texts, and their consensus and conflicts with each other. I base
myself here on my ethnographic fieldwork in the Dutch conspiracy
milieu, but for the purposes of this chapter I will draw predominantly
from my interview material.
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they identify much with really thinking about stuff and not following
the crowd, but in the end they all go with that herd in the same
direction […] but if you’re really critical, you should not only be
critical of all that is established […] I am someone who is much more
nuanced and critical, also of my own convictions.
This comes much to the dismay of Tom (47) a 9/11 Truther and
owner of the most visited Dutch website on this topic267, who sees his
credibility put on the line by
those stereotypical conspiracy buffs who always think according to
the same grid and start screaming about bloodlines and so on. That’s
so confirming the stereotype, exactly what is constantly written in the
newspapers about conspiracy theorists. A couple of lunatics stand up
and speak of bloodlines, well, you’re done then. But what I do that’s
completely different.
The latter quote makes clear that my respondents are aware of the
pejorative meaning of the conspiracy theorist label.
Interestingly, their self-identification as critical thinkers
functions not only to differentiate themselves from the dormant
masses, but also from the real conspiracy theorists in the field. This
relational positioning towards other conspiracy theorists can be taken
as a first indication that conspiracy theorists are no uniform group. All
respondents emphasized a desire to be different from the mainstream
and independent in their way of thinking, which is a distinction that
is common in modern subcultures that emphasize the ethics of
individualism and personal freedom (e.g. Houtman et. al, 2011). But
the interviews also reveal clear internal divisions, in that respondents
did not hesitate to make distinctions between me and them within the
conspiracy milieu. They might generally agree that “to look critically
at what is going on now creates space to imagine alternatives” (Steven,
28), but principally disagree on how to achieve that change. These
discussions form the dividing line along which different identities in
the milieu emerge.
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their reports with Bilderberg invitees show: no one speaks about what
happens inside. Nicole, a 63 year old psychotherapist, actively goes
out into the public, “I inform people, I dare to make contact with
different people, and I don’t mind to tell them the truth. I am not
afraid to be seen in demonstrations.” Similar efforts, I found, were
taken by Liam, who at one time was the mayor of a middle-sized town
and is the founder of a citizen’s platform arguing for governmental
disclosure of issues like chemtrails, collective vaccinations, and
European food regulations:
I am now more politically active than ever before, it’s just no longer
going along as representative of the government, but to rub against
the grain, to tell the government: “you guys are not doing the right
thing, this is going wrong,” and so on. We need to do something, we
need to go protest and go into resistance. So now I am constantly
approaching politics, media, science and all other authorities to tell
them, “guys, open your eyes, because this is serious, it’s not going
well.” (Liam, 67)
The activism of the conspiracy milieu can be understood as a form of
“subpolitics” (Beck, 1997). Modern institutions have since the 1960s
faced various critiques and can count on much popular distrust. Public
awareness of ecological issues, the destructive side of technology, and
corrupt politicians have given rise to a bottom-up form of politics
outside of the formal political arena, Beck argues. “Subpolitics,” then,
“questions the status of existing systems, calls for a rethinking of the
various schemes of classification (…), and asks for the invention of
new institutional ways” (1997:52). Activists in the conspiracy milieu
exemplify subpolitics in that they actively try to reform the system
through public interventions and by establishing alternative political
parties.
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establishment […] You see a lot of hate with them. I don’t need to
appeal to the feelings of hate of people. I don’t get any further with
that. I want to show them aspects of the reality they have been
deprived of. That’s what I want.
But more than condemning the militancy of those activists, this group
criticizes their strategies for not being fruitful since they do not reach
the general public. If you want to inform the people, to wake them
up, then it does not help to be offensive and rebellious. Activists, they
argue, merely serve their own public. What George noticed “is that
while there are so many small parties proclaiming their ideas, they are
actually very much turned inwards, but don’t try to send their
message to the bigger public.” How are they going to change the
world, they wonder, if they only preach to the choir? Tom (47)
agreed:
[T]hey trumpet a message that in their own view is perhaps world
saving, but strangely enough is mostly directed at each other. My
work is not directed at the people who are already convinced [9/11]
is bullshit. I aim explicitly at those who are used to the mainstream.
Otherwise you’ll only get a rumination of the same information and
a continuous self-confirmation. I want to bring down the wall
between the mainstream and the critical current in society.
Transcending these boundaries is, however, easier said than done.
John (34), a holistic nutritional advisor and owner of the Are You Still
Asleep website272 acknowledged this challenge: “if I look at the crowd,
it’s always the same people, well, try to get beyond those people
outside that clique. How do you reach the wider public?”
In contrast to both activists and retreaters, the objective of these
people is to mediate between the truths of hardcore conspiracy buffs
and the regular public. Hence, I call this group mediators. William (25)
founded the website Seek the Truth273 solely dedicated to this matter,
because
on the one end there are those who fully believe all what they are
being told on the news, while on the other end there are those who
firmly oppose all official accounts and come up with the most
delusional ideas. I find it interesting to pull both groups towards each
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new coat. How does it feel? Does it fit well, does it feel comfortable?
That’s really how I base my opinions. I follow the feeling.
Very much in contrast to those activists looking for solid proofs and
hard facts, retreaters discard the notion that these positivist
epistemologies should be guiding. Julie (31) explained,
[Y]ou know, the facts are just not that important. Because you’ll
never know that way. Not from thinking and facts. You will never,
you can never really know, because there is always something
disqualifying it, or research contradicting it, always, always, always,
with everything. The only thing that is real, that is true, is your own
self, it is your only advisor. Your higher self, higher knowing, that is
very important, and that’s the truth. Not all those stories,
interpretations and researches, that’s just not it.
Similar to those of activists, the ideas of retreaters concerning how they
see themselves and the world around them resonate with ideas about
knowing and truth. Following the New Age imperative of inner change
and personal growth as a means to achieve social change, they emphasize
that truth is about knowing from the inside what is right and what is
wrong. In contrast to the absolute truth of activists, retreaters
emphasize, in harmony with a long mystical tradition (cf. Troeltsch,
1992; Daiber, 2002), subjective truth: truth that is personal and that is
always colored and informed by feeling.
Mediators similarly oppose the idea of one absolute truth that
activists hold dear. Instead, they argue, “the truth is the truth only at
that moment, until a new truth comes along, yes truth is relative, or
it always changes” (Tom, 47). But the notion of many subjective
truths of retreaters is similarly discarded, “because then you come to a
relativism that says that science is the same as religion, or whatever. I
wouldn’t go that far. But that’s indeed the conclusion many
conspiracy theorists take,” William (25) explained. He continued,
it fits our time of course, that postmodern idea of “anything goes”.
But you don’t need to say that either there is one absolute truth or
that everything relativistically exists next to each other and they’re
all equal. I think there are ways imaginable in between.
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6.4 Conclusion
The prevalent image of the conspiracy theorist as a paranoid and
militant tinfoil hatter is a true social stigma (cf. Goffman, 1963) and
a clear stereotype (Pickering, 2001). By conceiving of conspiracy
theorists as one uniform group, be they paranoid or anomic,
academics have only contributed to this potent public image. But such
accounts leave a blind spot for diversity in the conspiracy milieu and
obscure relational differences between conspiracy theorists. In this
chapter, I have therefore set out to explore such variation through
people’s self-understanding. Instead of imposing external
categorizations, I studied how people active in the Dutch conspiracy
milieu associate with some and disassociate from others. The frame of
“similarity and difference” (Jenkins, 2014: 18) proved fruitful in
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bringing to the surface the distinctions of self and other at work in this
particular subculture.
My analysis shows that despite a common opposition towards
the cultural mainstream, considerable self-assigned variety exists in
the Dutch conspiracy milieu. I identified three distinguishable groups,
which were activists, retreaters and mediators. Whereas the militancy of
activists who are actively trying to change the status quo is vehemently
rejected by the two other groups alike; these latter two groups
differed again by either retreating into a psychological-spiritual
worldview in which change is said to come from within (retreaters) or
by working to build bridges between clashing worldviews on the road
to progress (mediators). These three subcultural strands of the
conspiracy milieu are not only characterized by their distinct
conceptions of self and other, but, in line with these relational
identifications, by divergent epistemological positions as well.
Whereas activists believe in one absolute truth, retreaters prioritize
their own subjective truths, and mediators explain how all truths are
situated and, when possible, related.
Based on this unmistakable diversity, I conclude that it is
problematic to speak in singular terms of “a distinct culture—
conspiracism—which encompasses a specific system of knowledge,
belief, values, practices, and rituals shared by communities of people
around the world” (Byford, 2011: 5). When the effort is verstehen,
conspiracy culture can hardly be understood as a monolithic whole,
despite similarities involving distrust towards institutions and the
elites who govern them. This plurality is confirmed by more recent
studies as well. Uscinski and Parent, for example, show broad
demographic diversity and concede that “conspiracy theorists differ
substantially from their stereotypes” (2014: 86). Ward and Voas, to
give another example, show how the conspiracy milieu is
characterized by a “male-dominated, often conservative, generally
pessimistic’ realm and the ‘female-dominated New Age, liberal, self-
consciously optimistic” realm (2009: 103-4). However, they end up
homogenizing this cultural milieu by arguing that it forms one “hybrid
system of belief” they call “conspirituality” (Ward and Voas, 2009:
103). My analysis shows that there are indeed streams recognizable in
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the conspiracy milieu (e.g. activists and retreaters), but when looked at
from the perspective of the interacting individuals, it becomes
apparent that these people are not easily grouped together into a
single “politico-spiritual” movement (Ward and Voas, 2009: 103).
Instead, their moral, political, and epistemological differences
generate considerable opposition and show lines of conflict and
disagreement within the conspiracy milieu. The conspiracy milieu can
therefore better be seen as a fluid network of different groups of
people, identifying with distinctly different worldviews, beliefs,
values, and practices.
It is from such findings that I argued in the Methodology
chapter to conceptualize the cultural and social worlds of conspiracy
theorists following Colin Campbell’s notion of the “cultic milieu”
(2002). The conspiracy milieu is, in its conceptual flexibility, better
able to encompass the heterogeneity of people, beliefs, practices, and
ideological orientations that I encountered in my fieldwork, yet
remains solid enough to acknowledge their shared opposition against
the cultural mainstream. Such opposition takes shape, besides
substantively comprising myriad “deviant belief systems and
practices” (Campbell, 2002: 14), on the level of identification
processes as well. In this chapter, I have shown ways in which people
in the conspiracy milieu actively resist their stigmatization by
distinguishing themselves from the mainstream as critical freethinkers:
it is not they who are gullible, but the sheeple who simply take for
granted what the epistemic authorities tell them. The adage I am not a
conspiracy theorist functions as a trope to reclaim rationality in a
cultural climate were official truth claims are increasingly contested
(cf. Bratich, 2008; Gieryn, 1999). One can doubt, however, how
powerful this resistance is when the exact same label and its pejorative
meaning is used by people active in the conspiracy milieu to
differentiate themselves from the real paranoids. This might be an
effective discursive strategy for some to augment their own
credibility, but it only strengthens the derogatory meaning of the
conspiracy theorist label, and threatens to discard the whole group in
question. As strategies of resistance paradoxically bolster people’s
own subjection, the difficulty of staging a revolution with the
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7. Contesting Epistemic Authority :
Conspiracy Theorists on the
Boundaries of Science
7.1 Introduction
In the preceding chapters I have shown how conspiracy theorists are
highly critical of the workings of mainstream epistemic institutions
and in particular about authoritative claims on truth. Conspiracy
theorists explicitly discard such truth claims of authoritative
institutions as corrupt, and propose alternative accounts instead.
Although each institution has its own operational logic and epistemic
rules, most give their claims on truth credibility by referring to
science275 and its norms and procedures for arriving at reliable
knowledge. When politicians hold that 9/11 was no inside job, and
that the WTC towers indeed collapsed because of the planes, they
strengthen such arguments with scientific reports proving that theory.
When food manufacturers say that certain additives in their products
are not harmful to human health, they put forward scientific research
confirming that there are no damaging effects. When journalists
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(and legitimize) the elevated status of its knowledge (1973: 270). But,
as time and sociological inquiry has shown, these and other
essentialists efforts never led to any conclusive ways to differentiate
science from other cultural practices (e.g. Gieryn, 1995: 404;
Harding, 1986: 41; Laudan, 1983: 112; Wallis, 1979: 6).
Constructivist scholars in the social studies of science have
found a way out of this conundrum by shifting attention from
identifying the unique building blocks of the ivory towers of science
toward the presentation of science in everyday life (e.g. Barnes, 1974;
Gieryn, 1983; Haraway, 1991; Shapin, 1986). Science, from this
perspective, is essentially nothing, yet potentially everything: it is an
empty cultural space filled with content through episodic negotiations
and settlements over its unique qualities and the authority it should
accompany (Gieryn, 1999: 1-31). The contours and contents of what
we regard as science, in other words, are not intrinsic to the nature
and practice of the institution itself, but are better thought as the
provisional result of repeated and endless dynamics of the inclusion
and exclusion of people, knowledge, and practices; efforts, that is, to
carve science off from other domains of life.277 This latter practice is
what Gieryn calls boundary work: “the discursive attribution of selected
qualities to scientists, scientific methods, and scientific claims for the
purpose of drawing a rhetorical boundary between science and some
less authoritative residual non-science” (1999: 4-5).
Taylor advances a similar “rhetorical perspective on the
‘demarcation’ of science” and argues that “the discursive practices of
multiple social actors are taken as constructing the boundaries that
mark off the domain of science from, for example, pseudoscience and
politics” (1996: 5). To put it differently, what science is in this or that
historical moment is intimately related to what it is not. As Gieryn
reminds us, “properties attributed to science on any occasion depend
largely on the specifics of its [excluded] ‘other’” (1999: 22). As such
scholars argue, it is of little (sociological) relevance how some
philosopher of high esteem defines science to a better or worse
degree, simply because the boundaries of science and its
accompanying epistemic authority are decided “downstream,” in the
courtrooms, boardrooms, and living rooms where the jurisdiction of
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science is being debated (Gieryn, 1999: 27). Within this frame, the
sociological question does not concern what science really is, but how
it is advanced and believed as a superior way of knowing. It focuses
both on public understandings of the distinctive qualities of science
and on the ways that scientists deploy certain representations of
science in situations where their authority is contested.
This constructivist perspective on the boundaries of science
puts the question of power at center stage. As Haraway reminds us,
“all drawings of inside-outside boundaries in knowledge are theorized
as power moves […] scientists and their patrons have stakes in
throwing sand in our eyes […] science is a contestable text and a
power field; the content is the form” (1991: 184-5). The privileges,
such as status, money, and authority, that accompany inclusion in the
domain of science are massive, making the demarcation problem not
just an intellectual or analytic quandary, but a matter of politics as
well. After all, Laudan argues, “the labeling of a certain activity as
‘scientific’ or ‘unscientific’ has social and political ramifications which
go well beyond the taxonomic task of sorting beliefs into two piles”
(1983: 21). Demarcation criteria are performative: they enact a
domain called science and endow that which is included with power,
funds, and prestige, while excluding others from those advantages. It
is therefore no surprise that they are actively deployed in battles for
epistemic authority. As Laudan argues, “no one can look at the history
of debates between scientists and ‘pseudoscientists’ without realizing
that demarcation criteria are typically used as machines de guerre
between rival camps” (1983: 20). Demarcation criteria are essential
dimensions of boundary work. They function as cultural repertoires
or “flexible vocabularies” for scientists (and others) to draw from
when faced with a need to distinguish science from its others (Mulkay,
1979: 72).
Descriptions of science are, as Gieryn makes clear,
“contextually tailored selections from a long menu defined by the
players and stakeholders, their goals and interests, and the arena in
which they operate” (1999: 21). The point here is that “mythical
‘origin stories’ of science” (Harding, 1986: 197-215), “descriptions
of science as distinctively truthful, useful, objective or rational”
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conspiracy theories are true does not show that it is rational to believe
in those theories” (Sunstein and Vermeule, 2009: 207)), and pose
research questions like “why do some people believe in conspiracy
theories while others do not?” (Byford, 2011: 6).
The association with religion goes further than a casual usage
of such words, which could be argued to be the consequence of
inadequate rhetorical or linguistic alternatives. Examples of how such
associations with religion are made more substantively abound.
Barkun argues that “belief in a conspiracy theory ultimately becomes
a matter of faith rather than proof” (2006: 7). Pipes says that
“conspiracy theorists devote themselves heart and soul to their faith.
…[T]he truest believers devote their very lives to their cause” (1997:
23). Olmsted states that “conspiracists come to believe in their
theories the way zealots believe in their religion: nothing can change
their mind” (2009: 11). Berlet argues that “conspiracism is a belief
system that refuses to obey the rules of logic” (2009: 5). In short,
scholars argue that conspiracy theorists are just like religious fanatics
because they are insensitive to skeptical reason and solid
argumentation.
But scholars also make a historical argument when linking
conspiracy theories to religiosity and corresponding worldviews.
Following Popper, who sees conspiracy theories as “the typical result
of the secularization of a religious superstition” (Popper, 2013: 306),
such academics commonly argue that contemporary ideas of hidden
powers who exercise influence and control over our social worlds are
a clear remnant of a religious past. In place of the mythological gods
that once were, conspiracy theorists now see more mundane yet
equally powerful agents orchestrating worldly affairs. Conspiracy
theorists, such critics argue, “are some of the last believers in an
ordered universe [but] such beliefs are out of step with what we have
generally come to believe in the late twentieth century” (Keeley,
1999: 123-4). Like the metaphysics of religion, this tendency to
“order the universe in a comprehensible form” (Aaronovitch, 2010:
324) is said to run counter to modern notions of how the world
works.
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reaching this all is. If only we start to realize what this means, we
would think twice saying what is real and what is not, what is
ridiculous or not.
Opinions about the existence and powers of non-physical
phenomena are often grounded in and validated by personal
experiences of the supernatural in everyday life. Neal (58), for
example, told me how he got cured from permanent back aches:
[S]o there was this woman I knew via work. One day she put both
her hands on my back. Three minutes or so, very quickly. “Do you
feel anything?” she asked, I said “no, not really.” The next day I woke
up without any pain in my back. Just like that, in one strike
completely over. … If you experience that first hand…what more
may be possible? So since then much of my reticence towards people’s
odd stories disappeared. So from that moment on, because for me
there is no doubt about it, you start looking at things differently. It
has set the door wide open, because I was really a science kid.
Despite his technical background, and against his preconceptions,
something supernatural like hands-on healing proved real to him and
fed his critique of science: “to know is to measure, and we measure
nothing, so it isn’t there,” as he said. From a scientific paradigm,
proper knowledge only comes from material observations, and if
there is not a material entity to measure, then there is no event that
could be said to take place. Neal implies that personal experiences of
immaterial events can only be dismissed by science.
The dogmatism of science is made worse, my respondents
argue, by the socialization of scientists into a culture of expertise with
its own particular set of assumptions and beliefs. This results in the
social exclusion and stigmatization of other, seemingly deviant forms
of knowledge. Steven (28) described his encounters with scientists as
contentious: “You know what it is, they have had a certain education,
they have already received certain information, they are formed in a
particular way. Their vision excludes therefore all others.” A much-
debated topic in this context is the effectiveness of vaccinations.
Because of their education in modern medical science, it is argued,
medical specialists no longer question the basic foundations of what
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I find it strange that people think: “Oh these white coated people,
they know it all, so we follow, we surrender.” Because they don’t know
it all! As a human being I can decide how, I want to stay in charge
and don’t want to surrender to doctors like that! I would like to have
conversations about how we are going to fix things, what the other
possibilities are.
Lucy (57) spoke similarly about her difficulties with authority,
“authority in the Western world, is ‘I am the boss, and you are
subservient, obedient, docile. And I believe that’s not right, that’s no
good.” When I asked her about concrete situations when authority
was an issue, she went into detail about her interactions with a
university professor who remained stiff and authoritarian when faced
with critique and a wish for discussion:
[H]e just cut us off, like an ulcer, because we went against him, that
was, absolutely unheard of back then, “I am the professor,” you get
me? And before that in high school, my parents, you name it. I hated
it when people told me what to do simply because they had a different
status. We may have different roles, but we are equal. It’s not because
you have a different role, your truth is worth more than mine. There
are some people I look up to, because I admire and respect how they
share their knowledge, their capabilities, and their means without
saying, “this is how it’s done, and that’s not how you should do it.”
The message of these people is that experts should not coast on their
scientific credentials and cultural authority in their interactions with
laymen. Instead, they should have a more open interaction with the
public and should acknowledge the practical wisdom, subjective
feelings, and (alternative) knowledge that ordinary citizens may have
gathered along the way. Most especially, scientific experts should
treat them as equals.
In addition, respondents pointed out that the social position
of scientific experts is legitimated and guarded through practices of
professional in-group protection. As members of a professional group
with similar education, assumptions, and norms, medical specialists
protect one another against outside threats and, collectively, cover up
for failures. This protection, they hold, is not only a social in-group
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greedy people with dark intents, but [there is] something troublingly
similar in the wheeling of causal explanations coming out of the deep
dark below” (2004b: 229). Like conspiracy theorists, the self-
identification of sociologists as righteous myth busters working to
unmask the illusions that ordinary people believe in is widespread
(Elias, 1978). Latour asks himself quite justifiably then, “what is the
real difference between [a] conspiracists and a popularized version of
social critique, inspired by, let’s say, a sociologist as eminent as Pierre
Bourdieu?” (2004b: 228). Conspiracy theory as (pop) sociology,
sociology as (intellectual) conspiracy theory: just what is the
difference?
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8. Conclusion
In contrast to prevalent notions of conspiracy theories as the
delusional thought of paranoid and militant minds endangering
democratic societies, I have set out with this cultural sociological
study to understand instead of pathologize the contemporary
prevalence of conspiracy theories. My goal was not to condemn or
discard them, but to grasp the meaning that these alternative forms of
knowledge have for the people involved with them. Such an effort
towards verstehen is largely absent in the academic study of conspiracy
culture, but is central to the long interpretative tradition of the social
sciences in which I situate this study. The overall research questions
that I pursued throughout this study was directed at mapping
conspiracy culture. What are the ideas, practices, biographies, and
products of people making up this subcultural world, and how are
these related to what I provisionally called the mainstream? And
secondly, how can the contemporary popularity of conspiracy
theories be explained?
One of the most distinctive aspects of this study is its
ethnographic focus. I studied conspiracy culture from the
perspectives of the people who engage directly with conspiracy
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our personal, social, and natural worlds. More than any other source
of knowledge, we afford credibility, authority, and resources to
science, for the simple reason that we believe in science to deliver us
the truth, or at least what comes most close to it. In sharp contrast to
the subjective ideas and experiences of ordinary people, political
activists, moral crusaders, or ecstatic prophets, scientific knowledge
is said to be objective. Science’s unique methodologies and
institutionalized culture expels social contaminants like feelings,
values, interests, backgrounds, alliances, and loyalties, and thus
produces pure knowledge (cf. Merton, 1973; Popper, 2002; 2014).
Despite a continuing affordance of trust in science, it is
nevertheless this belief in the possibility of objective knowledge
engrained in the “metanarrative of science” (Lyotard, 1984) that has
become problematic in contemporary life. Philosophers (of science)
assailed the possibility of any universal truth claims about reality, and
they derailed on theoretical grounds the firm belief in science as a
method and institution inherently leading to progress, emancipation,
and ultimately truth (e.g. Feyerabend, 2010[1975]; Foucault, 1970;
Lyotard, 1984; Rorty, 2009[1979]). Meanwhile, sociologists (of
science) began to understand that metanarrative of science as a
professional ideology serving the interests of its practitioners, and they
focused instead on what scientists actually do to reinforce that public
image when they fabricate knowledge and mobilize support for claims
on truth (e.g. Gieryn, 1999; Latour, 1987). Conspiracy theorists,
then, embody one stream of a wider popular current in contemporary
Western societies which puts that whole idea of objective knowledge
under scrutiny. Instead of regarding scientific knowledge, including
the realities that we are presented with daily, as more or less accurate
descriptions of the world out there,280 conspiracy theorists emphasize
that this knowledge is the product of a certain people in a certain place
and time. Like social constructivists in academia (cf. Hacking, 1999),
conspiracy theorists prioritize human creativity: reality is not so much
discovered, but is actively and continually constructed. Our
knowledge of the world can therefore never be neutral or objective,
they say, but should always be seen from the perspective of those
producing it.
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plane to transmit and express its real meaning, the other distrusts that
surface reality based on the assumption that appearances deceive, and
probes instead for the real meanings that are hidden, concealed, or
disguised. From the cultural sociological perspective that I take
throughout this study, it is not that relevant which hermeneutics is
the right or the most plausible way of interpreting information, but
rather what these different styles look like empirically, who deploys
them, and what the reasons and motivations are that people do so.
Felski argues in this respect not to be “suspicious of
suspicion”, and in her effort “to understand why it has proved so
attractive to contemporary scholars,” she directs attention to the
“pleasures” of this interpretative style (2011: 215). She speaks about
“the satisfaction of detecting figures and designs below the text’s
surface, fashioning new plots out of old, joining together the disparate
and seemingly unconnected, acts of forging, patterning and linking”
(2011: 228). Such pleasures, she continues, are not only intellectual
or cognitive but also emotional. Like the Victorian sensation novels
that induced “visceral responses in its readers,” it is only to be
expected that the “revelation of shocking secrets, the pursuit of guilty
parties, and the detection of hidden crimes” stimulates affective
responses (Felski, 2011: 230). From this perspective, I believe too
little attention has been given to the emotional dimensions of
conspiracy theorizing, and future research might seek to find out in
more empirical detail what sort of satisfactions a hermeneutic of
suspicion engenders in conspiracy theorists.
One noteworthy exception is Mark Fenster who argues that
conspiracy theorizing constitutes “a form of play” that induces “a sense
of pleasure”: “participants can ‘experience’ the rush and vertiginous
feelings associated with discovering conspiracy” (2008: 14).
Conspiracy theorizing is a hermeneutic practice, Fenster shows us,
that is not purely cognitive, driven by ideological or political
motivations, but an affective undertaking. The sifting of clues and the
ferreting out of hidden truths offers satisfaction and excitement.
Fenster quotes in this respect author Jonathan Vankin who describes
these pleasures “the conspiracy rush,” which he defines as the “zap of
adrenaline that hits when you apprehend a higher truth; the revelation
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9. Epilogue: Whose Side Am I On?
Throughout this study, I have emphasized that I refrain from making
any judgements on the truthfulness or morality of conspiracy
theories. I do so, firstly, because I believe it is not within my capacity
as a sociologist to assess the veracity of such alternative takes on
reality. But I primarily refrain from making such judgements because
it is not my intellectual objective to do so. Since I want to understand
this popular phenomenon, the question of truth becomes irrelevant—
even absurd. After all, if I would want to know why and how the San
people of the Kalahari Desert in Southern Africa do their rain dance
rituals, I would not get far by arguing that their beliefs are false or
superstitious. The same is true for my study of conspiracy culture,
where holding on to the truth or falsity of conspiracy theories only
obstructs a sociological assessment of their cultural meaning. The only
thing that counts for my purposes are people’s own understandings of
what is real and true, their perspectives on the world, and not my
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Scene 1
Around the year 2014, Stef Aupers and I submitted a manuscript that
was a version of Chapter 7 to the Public Understanding of Science journal
for publication. As is common in academic journals, our manuscript
was sent by the editors to two peers (scientific experts in the field)
who reviewed the anonymized manuscript on the basis of quality,
originality, craftsmanship, readability, and suitability for publication.
Several months later we received a “revise and resubmit” decision on
our manuscript. One reviewer was generally positive and
recommended that the journal accept the paper with minor revisions.
The other reviewer was a bit more critical, saying that “the article
deals with an important and worthwhile topic [and] utilizes
interesting data [but it] displays important shortcomings that need to
be addressed before the paper can be published.” It is these alleged
shortcomings that I will analyze here. To do so, it will be useful to
quote at length from the reviewer’s feedback:
[T]he analysis…merely describes (uncritically) the conspiracist point
of view…the authors fail to analyze the claims made by their
respondents as essentially rhetorical. For example, they observe that
many of their respondents’ suspicion of science is based on “personal
encounters with medical specialists, doctors, university teachers and
other academics.” However, regardless of whether or not these
encounters actually occurred, they need to be examined, first and
foremost in the context of their argument. References to personal
experience are a well-established rhetorical device used to strengthen
a particular truth claim, and is used particularly when justifying a
belief that others might perceive as problematic. Finally, and perhaps
most importantly, the authors’ engagement with conspiracy theories
is devoid of any critical edge. Of course, one can read conspiracy
theories is a way that reveals traces of Collins and Pinch, Latour or
Bourdieu, but only if one reads them selectively. The key aspect of
conspiracy theories is that they involve a lot more than skepticism
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Scene 2
In the summer of 2012, I wrote an op-ed for SciencePalooza.nl, a
well-known science blog in the Netherlands titled “Why Conspiracy
Thinking Should Not Be Discarded Too Easily.”282 I was in the midst
of my fieldwork when I read an interview in a major Dutch newspaper
with a well-established professor of Medical Biotechnology, who was
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Scene 3
During my visiting scholarship at Northwestern University (Illinois,
USA), which was awarded jointly by the Fulbright Program and the
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, I was invited to attend a four-day
seminar with fellow Fulbright grantees from all scientific disciplines
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References
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themselves (chapter five and six), others (chapters six and seven) and
the world around them (chapter three and four).
The first and foremost meaning that conspiracy theories have
in a contemporary post-industrial Western world is the expression of
a clear discontent with the way our societies work, and in particular
with how modern institutions such as finance, media, business,
science and politics function (chapter three, four, and five).
Conspiracy theorists are bothered by the fractional reserve system
virtualizing the money supply, they deplore what has become of the
watchdog function of journalism as media ownership consolidates,
they are worried about the powers of large multinational corporations
in a globalized market, they mourn the pollution of science by other
interests than a pure quest for knowledge, and they follow anxiously
the long-arm of the (Orwellian) state when surveillance technologies
proliferate. Moreover, conspiracy theories provide a framework for
people to formulate and channel their criticism and discontent about
the incessant concentration of power and wealth in the hands of a
mighty few—a concern that is now quite widespread (cf. Piketty,
2014; Stiglitz, 2012).
However, when looked at from the perspective of the
interacting individual, it becomes clear that conspiracy theories mean
much more than the channeling of societal discontent (chapter five).
For example, the occult, mystical, and spiritual components of many
conspiracy theories provide existential meaning and purpose in a
disenchanted world. Alternative origin stories, narratives of
supernatural and extraterrestrial existence, and Eastern philosophies
of life make up an important part of the conspiracy milieu and fill the
existential gap for those who have separated from traditional religious
institutions. But conspiracy theories also speak to changing ways of
experiencing reality. In this digitalized and mediatized world, fact and
fiction easily collide and manipulated depictions of reality are often
difficult to separate from truthful ones. The practices of many
conspiracy theorists, such as searching, watching, analyzing,
deconstructing, and reassembling news items and videos, might be
seen as popular ways to grapple with this dissolution of the Real.
Likewise, conspiracy theories signify the cultivation of a critical
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the dormant masses or sheeple who simply follow the crowd. As such,
they reverse the stigma of being irrational dupes and re-claim their
rationality: they in the mainstream are in fact the gullible ones.
Despite the active reversal of the stigma surrounding conspiracy
theories, people in the Dutch conspiracy milieu nevertheless reclaim
that pejorative label to distance themselves from the truly irrational
ones. Conspiracy theories are, in other words, multifunctional tropes
for identity formations.
Diversity. Whereas the majority of scholars homogenize
conspiracy culture by focusing on its alleged uniformity (in terms of
style, thematic content, narrative structure, and explanatory logic), I
have argued that this is not a sociologically productive strategy as it
obscures diversity in the conspiracy milieu, leads to stereotypes, and
enables processes of Othering (cf. Bhabha, 1983; Pickering, 2001;
Weis, 1995). Instead, I explicitly set out in this study to explore the
diversity of conspiracy culture following my ethnographic approach.
There is, first of all, variety in the conspiracy theories themselves
(chapter three). Although quite some of them share the notion of a
secret group pulling the strings of world affairs behind the scenes, the
designation of who exactly constitutes that secret group leads to a
diversity of opinions. Some speak of a worldwide network
shapeshifting extraterrestrial reptoids, whereas others assign the
relatively mundane cabals of an international power elite. But, as
Knight (2000) and Melley (2000) argued some time ago,
contemporary conspiracy theories also often lack a concrete and
clearly-defined enemy or cabal, and instead tend toward more elusive
and intangible webs of conspiring powers. In the Dutch conspiracy
milieu, I encountered conspiracy theories that detailed the
functioning of entire societal systems like the banking,
pharmaceutical, and food industries in which there were no concrete
conspiring agents, yet the often bizarre alignments of interests “can
only be described as conspiratorial, even when we know there has
probably been no deliberate plotting” (Knight, 2000:32). Moreover,
where some scholars argue for the historical continuity of conspiracy
theories (e.g. Byford, 2011; ; Pipes, 1997; Uscinski and Parent,
2014), I have observed that many conspiracy theories that are popular
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from all the rhetoric that gives plausibility to your claims on truth, a
strategy academics might call deconstruction, what remains of the
quality of your knowledge, conspiracy theorists ask. There are many
such truth wars out there today, such as the controversies around E-
numbers, climate change, vaccinations, the dangers of
electromagnetic radiation, and many more. Conspiracy culture
represents this broader societal conflict over knowledge and truth in
contemporary societies in which questions of what counts as legitimate
knowledge and why are frequently posed.
Given the corruption of mainstream institutions and the easy
manipulation of facts, conspiracy theorists distrust official
explanations and look for a deeper truth, an alternate reality that
explains what is really the case, since “nothing is what it seems.” To
get to that level of explanation, they start by critically assessing and
deconstructing the realities we are presented with: what does that
simulation of reality actually look like, who is involved in its making,
and are there any clues or symbols pointing to another truth? Their
goal is to unveil or de-mask the official story, which most people
uncritically accept as the truth. This interpretative style of looking for
concealed truths hidden behind or beneath the ordinary level of
everyday experience is not reserved for conspiracy theorists alone,
but stands in a long intellectual tradition by which people approach
the ordinary and mundane with skepticism and suspicion. Paul
Ricoeur calls that style “the hermeneutics of suspicion” and locates it
in the thought and writings of Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud (1970),
but it drives many contemporary scholarly approaches in a wide range
of academic traditions as well, including literary and cultural studies,
narrative research, semiotics, feminist theory, critical theory, and
sociology as a whole (cf. Birchall, 2006; Felski, 2011; Houtman,
2008; Josselson, 2004; Latour, 2004b). They all tend to be myth
busters, claiming to have insight into the real, the true, or the deeper
meanings of life, which are situated behind, beneath, or beyond the
everyday ideas and experiences of ordinary people. Given this larger
cultural history, it is hard to set conspiracy theorists aside as deploying
a pathological interpretative style, as most scholars have (e.g. Barkun,
2006: 4; Byford, 2011: 75; Pipes, 1997: 45).
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These three topics all direct attention to the fact that the
objective, unequivocal truths offered by our epistemic institutions are
for many people quite implausible. Based on my empirical material, I
argue that historical developments of secularization, mediatization,
democratization, and globalization add to a mounting disbelief in the
possibility of a single objective, irrefutable truth. Because of these
broad cultural changes, we live in a world where multiple takes on
reality are able to exist side by side. Especially because these epistemic
institutions cannot provide us as before with a strong sense of security
about the truthfulness of the knowledge they produce, it becomes
difficult to trust the realities they present us. Instead, we see a
plurality of competing versions of the real available for consumption.
For example, one might think of the many different scenarios of what
happened on 9/11, each of which creates its own more or less
convincing reality—each of them could be true. Since we are
bombarded today with different and sometimes even contradictory
information about what is the case, the truth of the situation becomes
more and more elusive. The sociological question that arises is, how
do people deal with that epistemic instability, living their lives in a
world where truth has become problematic and difficult to ascertain?
Based on my analyses of the Dutch conspiracy milieu, I
conclude this study by contrasting two ideal-typically opposed ways
to do so. On the one hand is a modernist quest for the truth in which
people ardently look for real evidence and hard facts. This strategy holds
that solid research and firm logic can disclose truths concealed by the
many illusory stories we are told (cf. Bauman, 1987; Giddens, 1998;
Latour, 1993a). But conspiracy culture embodies many postmodern
characteristics as well, such as an incredulity towards objective truth
claims, a prioritization of other ways of knowing (emotions, feelings,
intuition, personal experience, custom, metaphysics, tradition,
cosmology, myth, religious sentiment, mystical experience), the
bricolage of new realities from different forms of knowledge, and a
demand for egalitarian roles in relation to the experts (cf. Bauman,
1991; Ritzer, 1997; Rosenau, 1992). Conspiracy culture, so goes my
last argument, speaks to us about a world where the truth is no longer
assured, but “out there” for us to weigh, juggle, construct, assess,
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Notes
1
Personal email from Liam (67).
2 http://themindunleashed.org/2015/11/the-paris-attacks-what-you-really-
need-to-know.html, last retrieved November 20 2015.
3
http://www.collective-evolution.com/2015/11/15/whats-really-going-on-
with-paris-terror-attacks-summed-up-in-4-minutes/, last retrieved November 20
2015.
4 http://www.ninefornews.nl/analist-aanslag-parijs-was-mogelijk-valse-vlag-
mogelijk-valse-vlag-om-mensen-bang-te-maken-voor-vluchtelingen/
8 As I explain later on, the terms conspiracy theorists and conspiracy theory are far
from neutral but are powerful in and off themselves: they discard the referent as
irrational and untrue. I speak in more detail about the power of language, i.e.
labelling certain people/forms of thought as conspiracy theorist/y, in the
introduction and the methodology section, but the problem boils down to the fact
that using these terms without any reflexivity simply reproduces the stigmatized
connotations they have. However, for reasons of clarity and esthetics I have
chosen to use these terms nonetheless. This does not imply that I am insensitive to
or ignorant about the effects of calling the people in my study and their beliefs
conspiracy theorists/ies, but simply that any other term, or putting the
“conspiracy theorists/ies” within brackets (which I tried before) would make the
reading less clear and more difficult to read. One could even say that my usage of
these terms neutralizes or lessens the negative connotations they have, as I write
about them in neutral ways.
9http://www.gallup.com/poll/165893/majority-believe-jfk-killed- conspiracy.
aspx,
10 http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2011/PPP_Release_National_
ConspiracyTheories_040213.pdf
11 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/15/alien-believers-outnumber-
god_n_1968259.html
12
http://www.quest.nl/artikel/ruim-40-procent-gelooft-de-overheid-volgt-
stiekem-alles-wat-we-op-internet-doen
13
Think of the militant rhetoric of Senator McCarthy and later Senator
Goldwater, and reactionary groups like the John Birch Society.
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14
Hofstadter states: ‘I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any
figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the
paranoid style would have little contemporary relevance if it were applied to
people with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of
expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant’
(1996: 4)
15
Hofstadter’s historical treatment of political movements exemplifying this
paranoid style – from the anti-Masonic and anti-Catholic movements of the
nineteenth century through the anti-communist right-wing groups gaining
popularity in the middle of the twentieth century – often moves from describing
‘paranoid modes of expression’ in the history of American politics to classifying
such ‘figures of the past or present’ as paranoid persons. Or when Hofstadter
explains how ‘the paranoid’ conceives of the enemy, Freudian presumptions
surface: ‘the enemy seems on many counts a projection of the self: both the ideal
and the unacceptable aspects of the self are attributed to him’ (1996: 32). He goes
on to speak of how ‘the fantasies of true believers serve strong sadomasochistic
outlets’ as they can ‘project and freely express unacceptable aspects of their own
minds’ onto the enemy: their ‘sexual freedom’, their ‘lack of moral inhibition’
and ‘a preoccupation with illicit sex’ (1996: 34).
16
Pipes speaks about conspiracy theories as ‘phobias’ (1997: 25), Showalter as
‘psychogenic syndromes’ (1998) and Robins and Post (1997) at last use words like
‘parasite’, ‘bacillus’, ‘infection’ and ‘virus’ to describe the ‘epidemic’ of
conspiracy theories that allegedly encroach our societies. But also more recently:
when Sunstein and Vermeule (2009) speak in their title of ‘causes and cures’ they
simply allude to conspiracy theories as a pathology.
17
These are no hypothetical assertions, but refer to real world happenings: the
NSA scandals, the global war on terror, Bush and Blair on the (inexistent)
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, the powerful lobby industry in Brussels and
Washington, the corporate financing of research institutes, and so on.
18
The same sort of political function of conspiracy theories is found in the works
of John Fiske (1996) and Patricia Turner (1993) who particularly focus on the
African American communities and their suspicions of a “black genocide” through,
most notably, the spread of HIV/AIDS as a bio-warfare weapon. Given the
systematic discrimination of African Americans in the United States, and a history
of intentional abuse against them (think of the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment),
these scholars argue that such fears of white aggression are well justified.
Moreover, like Dean, they hold that their conspiracy theories can be politically
affirmative: they provide ways to account for the economic and social exclusion,
and offer strategies for political resistance. Knight (2000: 143-167); Fenster
(2008: 279-289) and Bratich (2008: 97-122) provide additional and interesting
analyses of conspiracy theories in the African American communities, and of the
OTES
1
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33
http://niburu.co/, last retrieved October 21, 2014
34
http://www.ninefornews.nl/over-ons/, last retrieved October 21, 2014
35
http://www.ninefornews.nl/over-ons/, last retrieved October 21, 2014
36
http://www.wijwordenwakker.org/intro.asp, last retrieved October 25 2014
37
http://www.marcelmessing.nl/content.asp?m=M6andl=NL, last retrieved
October 25, 2014
38
http://argusoog.org, last retrieved October 21, 2014
39
http://argusoog.org, last retrieved October 21, 2014
40
http://www.wanttoknow.nl/about/, last retrieved October 21, 2014
41
http://www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/over/#.Vs7vzJwrLIU, last retrieved October
21, 2014
42
http://anarchiel.com/, last retrieved October 21, 2014
43
“Ostrich Politics” is a Dutch expression for politics that turns away from the real
problems by ignoring them (that is, sticking one’s head in the sand, like an
Ostrich).
44
http://www.pateo.nl/PDF/PartijprogrammaSOPN.pdf, last retrieved
February 29, 2016
45
http://www.pateo.nl/PDF/PartijprogrammaSOPN.pdf, last retrieved
February 29, 2016
46
http://www.ad.nl/ad/nl/1012/Nederland/article/detail/3246108/2012/
04/25/UFO-partij-rekent-op-tientallen-Kamerzetels.dhtml;
http://www.telegraaf.nl/binnenland/20045066/___UFO-
partij__wil_tientallen_zetels__.html; http://www.volkskrant.nl/politiek/ufo-
partij-sopn-rekent-op-minimaal-76-zetels-op-12-september~a3288796/;
http://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2012/07/19/deze-lijsttrekker-gelooft-niet-zozeer-
in-ufos-wel-in-76-zetels (last retrieved February 24, 2016)
47
www.frontierworld.nl, last retrieved February 25, 2016
48
http://wearechange.org/about/; http://www.wacholland.org/;
https://www.youtube.com/user/wearechangeholland/about (last retrieved
February 24, 2016)
49
http://wearechange.org/about/
50
https://www.youtube.com/user/WeAreChangeRotterdam
51
http://barracudanls.blogspot.nl/2009_05_01_archive.html;
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Luke_Rudkowski (last retrieved February 24,
2016)
52
http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/mission-statement, last retrieved
March 3, 2016
53
E.g. http://www.hpdetijd.nl/2011-10-15/occupy-amsterdam-voorman-911-
was-een-complot/, https://www.olino.org/articles/2011/01/21/wat-is-de-
zeitgeist-movement/, last retrieved March 3, 2016
54
http://www.davidicke.com/about-david/, last retrieved February 25, 2016
2
OTES
55
E.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitgeist_(film_series);
https://skeptoid.com/episodes/4196; http://peterjoseph.info/top-five-
zeitgeist-movie-myths/ (last retrieved February 24, 2016)
56
http://www.thrivemovement.com/the_movie, last retrieved March 3, 2016
57
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Thrive, see for more criticism:
https://www.quora.com/Who-is-Foster-Gamble-who-presents-the-
documentary-Thrive, last retrieved March 3, 2016
58
Partij voor de Dieren was founded in 2002 and currently has two of the 150
seats in the Dutch House of Representatives and one of the 75 in the Senate.
Among its main goals are animal rights and animal welfare, but it claims not to be
a single-issue party, and should be seen as part of the environmental and
sustainability movements.
59 Website known to me. Anonymized by request of the owner (last retrieved
www.wanttoknow.nl/inspiratie/john_consemulder/john-en-ad-broere-over-
geld-economie-en-de-bankenzwendel, last retrieved last retrieved November 18,
2014
70
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2012/02/recht-op-geldcreatie-afnemen-van-de-
banken, last retrieved last retrieved November 18, 2014
71
www.argusoog.org/2011/10/van-staatsschulden-naar-staatsgulden, or
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/kapitalistisch_bankieren_volgens_complotters,
last retrieved last retrieved November 18, 2014
72
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2098, last retrieved last
retrieved November 18, 2014
73
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2013/11/het-wijdverbreide-misverstand-over-het-
begrip-geld, last retrieved last retrieved November 18, 2014
74
This is the title of the section “Geld” (money in Dutch) of the
www.wanttoknow.nl website, www.wanttoknow.nl/economie/geld, last
retrieved last retrieved November 18, 2014
75
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2012/02/recht-op-geldcreatie-afnemen-van-de-
banken, last retrieved last retrieved November 19, 2014
76
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M26ands=M69andss=P1480
andI=NL or www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2012/11/ex-bankier-doet-boekje-open-
over-het-geldsysteem,
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_macht_van_de_centrale_banken, last
retrieved last retrieved November 19, 2014
77
www.anarchiel.nl/display/het_pokerspel_van_de_centrale_banken_deel1/2,
last retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
78
www.anarchiel.nl/display/het_pokerspel_van_de_centrale_banken_deel1, last
retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
79
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/the_great_depression_is_coming, last
retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
80
A similar and more recent story could be told about the how the European
Stability Mechanism was ratified in the countries of Europe. Many people in the
conspiracy milieu have expressed serious doubts about a system of “economic
dictatorship” that would indebt the people ever more. E.g.
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/het_esm_paard_staat_binnen, or
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M26ands=M69andss=P1411andI=
NL or www.argusoog.org/2012/05/esm-een-zwarte-dag-voor-de-democratie,
last retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
81
These articles almost all refer to the work of G. Edward Griffin, especially “The
Creature of Jekyll Island,” and to the work of Dutch (financial) journalist Willem
Middelkoop, especially his book Als de dollar valt (When the Dollar Collapses).
82
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P268, or
OTES
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/de-us-dollar-sterft-een-roemloos-einde,
last retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
83
See, for example, the work of Neil Irwin, a senior economic correspondent at
the New York Times and author of “The Alchemists,” particularly his blog on the
washingtonpost.com of 21st of December 2013 (www.washingtonpost.com/
blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/12/21/the-federal-reserve-was-created-100-years-
ago-this-is-how-it-happened) , last retrieved last retrieved November 20, 2014
84
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M26ands=M69andss=P1690
andI=NL or www.ninefornews.nl/connectie-tussen-fed-en-jekyll-island-
ontmaskerd-video, last retrieved last retrieved November 19, 2014
but the attendees are nowadays not so secret anymore.
85
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/de-us-dollar-sterft-een-roemloos-einde,
last retrieved last retrieved November 19, 2014
86
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P268, last retrieved last retrieved
November 19, 2014
87
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_macht_van_de_centrale_banken,
www.wanttoknow.nl/economie/geld or www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.
asp?m=P268, last retrieved last retrieved November 19, 2014
88
The unabridged version is found on e.g. www.wanttoknow.nl/economie/geld/
goud-en-zilver-terug-als-betaal-middel-in-vs, last retrieved November 19, 2014
89
www.wanttoknow.nl/economie/geld, last retrieved November 19, 2014
90
Quote found on the Facebook page of www.ninefornews.nl, last retrieved
November 19, 2014
91
These are the words of Edward Bernays, quoted on: www.anarchiel.com/
stortplaats/toon/the_elite_great_game_and_world_war_iii, last retrieved
November 19, 2014
92
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/the_elite_great_game_and_world_war
_iii, last retrieved November 19, 2014
93
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P943, www.anarchiel.com/
stortplaats/toon/the_elite_great_game_and_world_war_iiiwww.zaplog.nl/zapl
og/article/evil_bernays_de_elite_koopziekte_en_mindcontrol, last retrieved
November 19, 2014
94
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M5ands=M113andI=NL, last
retrieved November 20, 2014
95
www.anarchiel.nl/display/de_pers_is_dood, last retrieved November 11,
2014
96
www.ninefornews.nl/vertrouwen-in-reguliere-media-blijft-op-dieptepunt,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M64andss=P888andI=N,
last retrieved November 11, 2014
97
This refers to De Groene Amsterdammer (a weekly). The “De Persgroep”
(Major Dutch and Belgian newspapers (e.g. Volksrant, Parool, Trouw), TV- and
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radio stations) is owned by the Belgian entrepreneurial family Van Thillo, the
family Brenninkmeier (C&A) owns the NRC Media Group, the family Fenterer
van Vlissingen is said to own the Dutch Press Agency (ANP), the Van Puijenbroek
family owns the Telegraaf Media Group. The eight biggest commercial TV
channels are owned by RTL (Bertelsmann) and SBS (Sanoma).
98
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857, last retrieved November
11, 2014
99
E.g. www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/klokkenluider-elke-dag-vervalste-ik-het-
nieuws, www.zapruder.nl/portal/rubriek/huichelmedia,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857,
www.anarchiel.nl/display/de_pers_is_dood_vervolg, last retrieved November
12, 2014
100
www.anarchiel.nl/display/wie_bepalen_het_nieuws_in_nederland, last
retrieved November 12, 2014
101
www.ninefornews.nl/bepaalt-de-overheid-het-nieuws-de-knusse-relatie-
tussen-journalisten-en-hoge-ambtenaren, last retrieved November 12, 2014
102
www.zapruder.nl/portal/rubriek/huichelmedia/P80?#n8658, last retrieved
November 12, 2014
103
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/journalisten-laten-zich-omkopen-en-heulen-met-
machthebbers, www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/klokkenluider-elke-dag-vervalste-
ik-het-nieuws, www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/09/journalisten-worden-
omgekocht, last retrieved November 12, 2014
104
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857 link to:
files.meetup.com/348941/no_tv_flyer—6pieces.pdf, last retrieved November
12, 2014
105
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P943,
www.ninefornews.nl/zet-de-televisie-uit, last retrieved November 12, 2014
106
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/subliminaal_boodschappen_doen, last
retrieved November 13, 2014
107
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857, last retrieved November
13, 2014
108
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/een_wereldwijde_samenzwering_
mind_control_van_miljarden, www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=
P943, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/the_elite_great_game_and_
world_war_iii, last retrieved November 13, 2014
109
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/subliminaal_boodschappen_doen, last
retrieved November 13, 2014
110
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857, last retrieved November
13, 2014
111
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M135andss=P1614
andI=NL, last retrieved November 13, 2014
OTES
112
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P997, last retrieved November
13, 2014
113
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857, last retrieved November
13, 2014
114
www.ninefornews.nl/mtv-awards-onderdeel-van-propagandaoffensief-
illuminatie, last retrieved November 13, 2014
115
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/rapper-moest-offer-brengen-voor-illuminati-in-
ruil-voor-roem, www.argusoog.org/2013/01/waarom-worden-sommige-
artiesten-en-hun-liedjes-beroemd, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/
when_insiders_expose_the_dark_side_of_the_entertainment_industry, last
retrieved November 13, 2014
116
Quote found on the Facebook page of www.truththeory.org, linked by
ninefornews.nl, last retrieved November 24, 2014
117
www.zapruder.nl/portal/rubriek/corporatisme_het_gevaarlijkste_virus_ter_
wereld_deel_1, last retrieved November 20, 2014
118
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1698, last retrieved November
20, 2014
119
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/05/grootkapitaal-maakt-de-dienst-uit-in-
europa, last retrieved November 20, 2014
120
www.zapruder.nl/portal/more_power_to_the_corporations, last retrieved
November 20, 2014
121
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/wereld_gecontroleerd_door_147_
bedrijven, last retrieved November 20, 2014
122
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl147-superbedrijven-controleren-wereldeconomy,
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2011/10/1-van-bedrijven-controleert-40-wereld
economie, ww.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/147_bedrijven_besturen_
wereld, last retrieved November 20, 2014
123
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2019, www.gewoon-
nieuws.nl/2014/11/de-financiele-wereld-is-machtiger-dan-de-politiek, or
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/the_corporation, last retrieved November
20, 2014
124
www.zapruder.nl/portal/rubriek/corporatisme_het_gevaarlijkste_virus_
ter_wereld_deel_1, last retrieved November 20, 2014
125
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/04/vakbonden-niet-opgewassen-tegen-elite or
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_wereld_is_een_grote_corporatie, last
retrieved November 20, 2014
126
www.anarchiel.com/display/nederland_wieg_van_corporatie_en_wereldbank,
last retrieved November 20, 2014
127
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/perfect_genethics_deel_2, or
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=M30andss=P813andI=NL
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
, www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2013/12/monsanto-staat-op-het-punt-hun-grootste-
coup-ooit-te-plegen or www.anarchiel.com/display/onze_democratie_
werkt_voor_geen_meter, last retrieved November 20, 2014
128
E.g. www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/het-geraffineerde-vaccinatie-spel-
van-de-farmaceutische-industrie, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/bp_wil_
stilzwijgen_wetenschap_kopen, or www.argusoog.org/2012/11/
wetenschapper-die-gevaren-van-ggo-voor-gezondheid-ontdekte-werd-direct-
ontslagen-en-team-opgeheven, last retrieved November 20, 2014
129
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/shell-en-grote-banken-ontwijken-belasting,
www.wanttoknow.nl/nieuws/26-van-30-grootste-corporaties-betalen-0-
belasting, or www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/spaanse_burgers_betalen_
belasting_terwijl_de_grote_bedrijven_de_belasting_ontduiken, last retrieved
November 20, 2014
130
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/wereldwijde-mars-tegen-monsanto-van-start,
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/02/voedselmaffia-vernietigt-de-natuur, or
www.wanttoknow.nl/nieuws/apple-iphone-productie-ligt-stil-door-
arbeidsonrust, last retrieved November 20, 2014
131
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/zap_cinema_food_inc_2008,
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/het-pillenbedrog/comment-page-1,
www.anarchiel.nl/display/de_misleiding_van_voedsel_labels, last retrieved
November 21, 2014
132
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_grote_diamanten_hoax,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1070, or
www.ninefornews.nl/oud-topman-nestle-water-als-basisrecht-is-extreem-video,
last retrieved November 21, 2014
133
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_slag_om_oekraine_1/6,
www.ninefornews.nl/911-excuus-om-oliegigant-te-laten-profiteren-van-val-irak,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M26ands=M118andss=P2351andI
=NL, www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/mind-control/gadaffi-moest-weg-waarom-
eigenlijk, last retrieved November 21, 2014
134
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/monsanto_moet_dood1, last retrieved
November 21, 2014
135
www.ninefornews.nl/de-ongebreidelde-macht-van-monsanto, last retrieved
November 21, 2014
136
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/monsanto_moet_dood1, last retrieved
November 10, 2014
137
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1554, last retrieved November
10, 2014
138
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/monsanto_een_bijbelse_plaag, last retrieved
November 10, 2014
139
www.ninefornews.nl/aggressieve-lobby-voor-genetisch-gemanipuleerd-
8
OTES
voedsel, www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/hoe-monsanto-en-het-
amerikaanse-leger-samenwerken, last retrieved November 10, 2014
140
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/hoe-monsanto-en-het-amerikaanse-
leger-samenwerken, last retrieved November 10, 2014
141
www.ninefornews.nl/de-ongebreidelde-macht-van-monsanto, last retrieved
November 10, 2014
142
E.g. www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/02/voedselmaffia-vernietigt-de-natuur,
www.wanttoknow.nl/economie/200000-boeren-in-india-al-tot-zelfmoord-
gedreven, www.wanttoknow.nl/gezondheid/voedsel/oorlog-op-je-bord, last
retrieved November 10, 2014
143
www.anarchiel.nl/stortplaats/toon/the_hidden_agenda_of_genetic_
manipulation_f._william_engdahl, last retrieved November 10, 2014
144
www.argusoog.org/2010/12/oorlogsmachines-blackwater-monsanto-en-bill-
gates, last retrieved November 10, 2014
145
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2190,
www.argusoog.org/2009/01/monsanto-wie-de-voeding-beheerst-beheerst-de-
wereld, last retrieved November 10, 2014
146
Jacob Bronowski was a British mathematician, historian of science, theatre
author, poet, and inventor. This quote circulated on the Facebook page of
www.wanttoknow.nl, last retrieved November 26, 2014
147
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/wetenschappelijk-onderzoek-toont-
wetenschaps-fraude-aan, last retrieved November 26, 2014
148
Note there is a considerable difference between the US and the Netherlands,
where religious (creationist) arguments hardly fuel conspiracy critiques of science.
149
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/wetenschappelijk-onderzoek-toont-
wetenschaps-fraude-aan, last retrieved November 25, 2014
150
www.gewoon-niews.nl/2013/11/de-beerput-van-frauduleuze-
wetenschappelijke-publicaties, last retrieved November 26, 2014
151
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2229, last retrieved November
25, 2014
152
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/wetenschappelijk-onderzoek-toont-
wetenschaps-fraude-aan, last retrieved November 25, 2014
153
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2123, last retrieved November
25, 2014
154
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2123, last retrieved November
25, 2014
155
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/wetenschap_volgens_kary_mullis_een_
aannemelijke_fabel, www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2229,
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/wetenschappelijk-onderzoek-toont-
wetenschaps-fraude-aan, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/sp_wil_einde_
aan_dubbele_petten_wetenschap, last retrieved November 25, 2014
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
156
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=M22andss=P309andI
=NL, last retrieved November 25, 2014
157
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1444, but also
www.wanttoknow.nl/gezondheid/vaccinaties-ondergraven-de-immuniteit,
www.anarchiel.com/display/vaccinaties_en_hun_werkzaamheid, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
158
www.zapruder.nl/portal/vaccinaties_a_bigger_picture, www.wijworden
wakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=M22andss=P829andI=NL, or
www.argusoog.org/2009/11/historische-feiten-die-de-gevaren-en-
doelmatigheid-van-vaccinaties-onthullen, www.wanttoknow.nl/inspiratie/
meelezen/vaccinaties-bezint-eer-ge-begint, last retrieved November 26, 2014
159
www.zapruder.nl/portal/vaccinaties_a_bigger_picture, www.argusoog.org/
2012/11/basis-van-vaccinatie-theorie-fout, last retrieved November 26, 2014
160
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=M22andss=P829
andI=NL, last retrieved November 26, 2014
161
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/farmaconcern_merck-ontmaskerd-wegens-
vaccinfraude or www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/onderzoeker-van-big-pharma-
geeft-grove-fraude-toe, www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=
M22andss=P829andI=NL, last retrieved November 26, 2014
162
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/officiele-transcripten-vaccinatieprogramma-
gebaseerd-opleugens, www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4
ands=M22andss=P1558andI=NL, www.wanttoknow.nl/gezondheid/
geraffineerde-mazelen-leugens-van-het-rivm-naieveteit, www.anarchiel.com/
stortplaats/amerikaanse_gezondheidsraad_gefinancierd_door_vaccinproducenten
_en_defensie, last retrieved November 26, 2014
163
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/evolutie_vs_hpv_vaccinatie_1_0, but also
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/steek_dat_mazelenvaccin_maar_in_je_reet,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M4ands=M22andss=P687andI=NL
, www.anarchiel.com/downloads/vpo.pdf, last retrieved November 26, 2014
164
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_mexicaanse_griepvaccin_kwik_en_
autisme, www.ninefornews.nl/zo-werkt-het-vaccinatieprogramma-in-het-echt,
www.argusoog.org/2012/02/vaccins-blazen-het-anti-immuunsysteem-van-
kinderen-op, or www.wanttoknow.nl/vaccinaties-gezondheid/waarom-je-ook-
geen-tetanus-vaccinatie-nodig-hebt, www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/08/fraude-
in-officiele-verklaring-over-bmr-vaccin, last retrieved November 26, 2014
165
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/twijfel_aan_alles_maar_niet_aan_hiv, last
retrieved November 26, 2014
166
“To believe someone on his blue eyes” is the literal translation of a Dutch
expression meaning to assume somebody speaking the truth, without
substantiation (www.wanttoknow.nl/dossiers/wetenschap/klimaat, last
retrieved November 27, 2014
OTES
167
www.argusoog.org/2009/12/lord-monckton-spreekt-een-greenpeace-
actievoerder-aan-over-global-warming, last retrieved November 27, 2014
168
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/ipcc-overdreef-klimaatverandering-tientallen-jaren,
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/06/gegevens-opwarming-aarde-vervalst-door-
nasa-en-vs, www.anarchiel.nl/stortplaats/toon/klimaatleugens_dateren
_van_1996, last retrieved November 27, 2014
169
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/climategate_30_de_leaker_spreekt, last
retrieved November 27, 2014
170
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/climate_truth_1, last retrieved November
27, 2014
171
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M64andss=P1550
andI=NL, last retrieved November 27, 2014
172
www.argusoog.org/2012/10/niet-twijfelen-niet-aarzelen-vaccins-zijn-en-
blijven-veilig, last retrieved November 26, 2014
173
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/twijfel_aan_alles_maar_niet_aan_hiv, last
retrieved November 26, 2014
174
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/dertij_jaar_aids_oplichting but also
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P8, www.anarchiel.com/display/
afrika_het_nieuwe_imperialisme_en_aids, last retrieved November 26 2014
175
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/wetenschap_volgens_kary_mullis_een_
aannemelijke_fabel, last retrieved November 26, 2014
176
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/dertij_jaar_aids_oplichting, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
177
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/streepjes_in_de_luchie, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
178
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/wat_betekent_een_100_dna_match_
zapruder_goes_csi, last retrieved November 26, 2014
179
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/orwell_eat_your_heart_out, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
180
www.anarchiel.com/display/een_wereld_zonder_overheid, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
181
E.g. According to WorldPublicOpinion.org, last retrieved January 19, 2015
182
For an overview of the different polls, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Opinion_polls_about_9/11_conspiracy_theories, last retrieved January 19, 2015
183
www.anarchiel.com/display/een_wereld_zonder_overheid, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
184
www.anarchiel.com/display/een_wereld_zonder_overheid, last retrieved
November 26, 2014
185
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1857, last retrieved November
27, 2014
186
www.ninefornews.nl/geloof-in-onze-overheid-het-meest-gevaarlijke-bijgeloof,
1
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
200
E.g. www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/mind-control/hoe-cia-en-mossad-isis-in-
het-leven-riepen, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/corbettreport_who_
is_really_behind_isis, last retrieved November 27, 2014
201
www.ninefornews.nl/het-maakt-niet-uit-op-wie-je-stemt-de-geheime-
overheid-gaat-toch-niet-veranderen, last retrieved November 27, 2014
202
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/mediaster_al_zarqawi, or www.
wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P2575, last retrieved November 27, 2014
203
www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/mind-control/psy-ops-manipuleren-ons-
wereldbeeld, last retrieved November 27, 2014
204
E.g. www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/psywar_-_wake_up, last retrieved
November 27, 2014
205
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/zap_cinema_the_war_on_
democracy_2007, www.ninefornews.nl/amerika-het-land-van-bedrog-en-
massahypnose-video, www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1706,
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/anonymous_government_controlled_opp
osition_psyop, last retrieved November 27, 2014
206
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/worstelaars_geitjes_en_mkultra, www.
ninefornews.nl/overheid-vs-experimenteerde-op-veteranen-onder-mk-ultra,
www.argusoog.org/2012/06/het-rapport-van-iron-mountain-illuminati-mind-
control, www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/mind-control/the-secrets-of-mind-
control, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/must_see_docu_blackops_human
_experiments_mindcontrol_torture_political_con, last retrieved November 27,
2014
207
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/de_marskramer_van_de_arabische_
revolutie, www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/media/midden-oosten-revoluties-
spontaan-mooi-niet, www.argusoog.org/2011/04de-oorzaak-van-de-orgie-aan-
destabilisaties-in-2011, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/de_door_het_
westen_geregiseerde_arabische_lente_otpor_etc, last retrieved November 27,
2014
208
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P1442, last retrieved
November 27, 2014
209
www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/media/midden-oosten-revoluties-spontaan-
mooi-niet, last retrieved November 27, 2014
210
www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/media/midden-oosten-revoluties-spontaan-
mooi-niet, last retrieved November 27, 2014
211
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/11/12-stappen-van-vrede-naar-burgerooglog,
last retrieved November 27, 2014
212
Hamlet to Horatio, Hamlet (1.5.167-8). This quote is often cited or used in
articles on conspiracy websites, e.g. “we understand that there is more between
heaven and earth than our scientists would like us to believe” on www.zapruder.
nl/portal/artikel/intro_weird_science_week, or “like Hamlet said in the
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
similarly titled play of William Shakespeare: ‘there’s more between heaven and
earth.’ Science cannot explain what happens on all these places” on www.
ninefornews.nl/de-m-driehoek-geeft-russisch-area-51-zijn-geheimen-prijs , or
“the winged expression ‘there’s more between heaven and earth’ is an apt
description here” on www.wanttoknow.nl/inpsiratie/gastcolums/werkelijkheid-
of-fictie, last retrieved November 27, 2014
213
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/rubriek/buitenaards, last retrieved December
8, 2014)
www.wijworderwakker.org/content.asp?m=M53ands=M92andI=NL,
www.wanttoknow.info/dossiers/universum, www.anarchiel.com/dossiers/ufo-
aliens, last retrieved December 1, 2014)
214
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M53ands=M92andss=P713andI
=NL, last retrieved December 1, 2014)
215
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/wat_we_van_nasa_niet_mogen_weten, last
retrieved December 1, 2014)
216
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/video-de-man-die-de-geheimen-van-area-51-
blootlegde, last retrieved December 1, 2014)
217
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M53ands=M92andss=P446
andI=NL, last retrieved December 1, 2014)
218
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M53ands=M92andss=P2241
andI=NL, or www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/aliens_could_share_more
_tech_with_us_if_we_warmonger_less, last retrieved December 1, 2014)
219
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/ooparts_deel_1_onbekend_en_onbemind,
last retrieved December 2, 2014
220
www.ninefornews.nl/deze-hamer-100-miljoen-jaar-oud, last retrieved
December 2, 2014
221
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/ooparts_deel_3_buitenaardse_schedels_en
_astronauten, last retrieved December 2, 2014
222
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/de_verboden_geschiedenis, last
retrieved December 2, 2014
223
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M135andss=
P1745andI=NL, www.wanttoknow.nl/universum/documentaire-mayas-en-
buitenaards-contact, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/mysteries_of_
the_gods_1977_-_William_shatner, last retrieved December 2, 2014
224
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/ooparts_deel_2_verloren_wetenschap, last
retrieved December 2, 2014
225
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M26ands=M90andss
=P427, www.argusoog.org/2009/10/mysterious-world-search-for-ancient-
technology-strange-archeology, www.wanttoknow.nl/inspiratie/alternatieve_
archeologie, last retrieved December 2, 2014
OTES
226
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=P58, last retrieved December 2,
2014
227
www.wanttoknow.nl/nieuws/franse-dna-onderzoekster-en-astronaute-doet-
zelfmoordpoging-wat-heeft-ze-ontdekt, last retrieved December 2, 2014
228
www.argusoog.org/2007/07/bewustzijn-zelf, last retrieved December 9,
2014
229
www.zapruder.nl/protal/artikel/zelfbewustzijn_is_onnatuurlijk, last
retrieved December 9, 2014
230
They refer here to the works of philosopher and cognitive scientist Dan
Dennett, who argues that “human consciousness and the free will are the result of
physical processes in the brain […] the brain’s circuitry fools us into thinking we
know more than we do, and that we call consciousness—isn’t” on:
www.ted.com/speakers/dan_dennett, last retrieved December 9, 2014
231
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M3ands=M122andss=P2429
andI=NL, last retrieved December 9, 2014
232
E.g. www.ninefornews.nl/wetenschap-wordt-beperkt-door-aannames-video,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M64andss=P2075I=NL,
or www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/graham_hancock_-_the_war_on_
consciousness_banned_ted_talk, last retrieved December 9, 2014
233
E.g. www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M3ands=M122andss=
P2425andI=NL, www.wanttoknow.nl/inspiratie-bewustzijn-en-creatie,
www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/het_pleiadisch_perspectief_uit_de_doofp
ot, last retrieved December 9, 2014
234
For example, the works of Dutch cardiologist Pim van Lommel, who wrote the
international bestseller Consciousness Beyond Life: The Science of the Near-Death
Experience, or those of the American neurosurgeon Eben Alexander, are often
cited and circulated.
235
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/hard-wetenschappelijk-bewijs-
bewustzijn-na-klinisch-dood, last retrieved December 9, 2014
236
www.ninefornews.nl/wetenschappers-vinden-bewijs-voor-leven-na-de-dood,
last retrieved December 9, 2014
237
www.wanttoknow.nl/hoofdartikelen/hard-wetenschappelijk-bewijs-
bewustzijn-na-klinisch-dood, last retrieved December 9, 2014
238
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M3ands=M122andss=P2429
andI=NL, last retrieved December 9, 2014
239
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M3ands=M122andss=P2429
andI=NL, last retrieved December 9, 2014
240
www.ninefornews.nl/toegang-krijgen-tot-buitenzintuiglijke-waarneming, last
retrieved December 9, 2014
241
www.ninefornews.nl/buitenzintuiglijke-waarneming-wetenschappelijk-
bewezen, last retrieved December 9, 2014
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
242
E.g. www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/cia_en_de_mensenrechten_part_3,
www.wijwordenwakker.org/content.asp?m=M6ands=M85andss=P714,
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/09/de-aanslagen-van-9-september-en-remote-
viewing, www.anarchiel.com/stortplaats/toon/helder_zien_als_wapen, last
retrieved December 9, 2014
243
www.wanttoknow.nl/universum/ingo-swann, last retrieved December 9,
2014
244
www.gewoon-nieuws.nl/2014/03/remote-viewing-en-de-piramide-van-
gizeh, last retrieved December 9, 2014
245
www.zapruder.nl/portal/artikel/cia_en_de_mensenrechten_part_3, last
retrieved December 9, 2014
246
These scholars are ambiguous about this historical change in conspiracy culture:
Knight, for example, argues that “alongside these familiar demonologies there have
emerged significant new forms of conspiracy culture, which operate in very
different ways to the more traditional modes of the conspiratorial style.
Moreover, even those traditional forms of right-wing extremist conspiracy
thinking take on new meanings and serve new purposes” (2000: 23, my
emphasis). Whether they see this change as all-encompassing and without
exceptions is therefore unclear. Despite these small caveats, their argument in
favor of such a historical change remains significant.
247
E.g. www.wakingtimes.com/2014/01/27/conspiracy-theorist-vs-
coincidence-theorist-importance-alternative-media/, last retrieved May 9, 2015
248
www.davidicke.com/shop/dvds, last retrieved February 27, 2015
249
www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2vlegEBuO0, last retrieved February 27, 2015
250
This was one of the slogans that David Icke used to promote his show, e.g.
http://www.purityevents.nl/david-icke-the-lion-sleeps-no-more, last retrieved
March 4, 2015
251
www.davidicke.com, last retrieved May 7, 2015
252
www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtVyrayu7Tc, last retrieved May 7, 2015
253
www.atlanteanconspiracy.com/2012/11/alex-judas-goat-jones.html, last
retrieved February 15, 2016
254
www.atlanteanconspiracy.com/search/label/David%20Icke, or
www.acceler8or.com/2012/09/shocking-shocker-alex-jones-david-icke-are-
illuminati-disinfo-agents/, last retrieved February 15, 2016
255
E.g. Ioannidis, JP (2005). Why most published research findings are false. PLoS
medicine, 2(8), e124.
256
E.g. John Virapen, MD, who has worked over 35 years in the pharmaceutical
industry and was general manager of Eli Lilly and Company in Sweden, wrote the
best seller Side Effect: Death. Confessions of a Pharma Insider (2010); or Peter Rost,
MD, who has been vice-president of Pfizer, one of the world's largest
OTES
pensioengeld-nederland-zou-wakker-moeten-worden/, zaplog.nl/zaplog/article/
wat_is_wakker_worden, www.argusoog.org/2007/04/hallo-wakker-worden/,
last retrieved September 3, 2015
263
E.g. www.wanttoknow.nl/overige/het-complot-van-de-complot-theorieen/,
www.ninefornews.nl/ijsland-overweegt-radicale-ommezwaai-het-moderne-
geldwezen/, last retrieved September 3, 2015
264
http://nl.hoax.wikia.com/wiki/Complotdenker, last retrieved September 3,
2015
265 Winti is a traditional Suriname religion that was brought over there by African
slaves and got mixed with Christian and indigenous American beliefs, a central
feature is the belief in a pantheon of spirits, called Winti, its rituals contain magic
and sorcery. Winti shares with Vodou in Haiti and Candomblé in Brazil.
266
Sheeple, e.g. sheep combined with people, is a commonly used portmanteau to
describe the gullible mainstream who do not think for themselves, but just go
with what everyone else is doing.
267
www.waarheid911.nl , last retrieved October 2, 2015
268
www.wacholland.org/content/acties-demonstraties, last retrieved February
10, 2013
269
http://www.youtube.com/user/wearechangeholland, last retrieved February
10, 2013
270
http://www.argusoog.org/, last retrieved February 10, 2013
271
http://www.waarheid911.nl/, last retrieved June 17, 2013
272
http://www.slaaptgijnog.nl/, last retrieved August 11, 2013
273
http://www.zoekdewaarheid.nl, last retrieved August 15, 2013
274
This aphorism is allegedly from feminist Gloria Steinem, although whether the
conspiracy theorists who invoke it know about that history and identify with her
project is unexplored. David Icke and his followers commonly proclaim this
phrase as a truism.
275 For reasons of clarity, I use science in this chapter as a singular whole as if it
designates a clear and bounded reality, but I am obviously aware of the continuous
discussions about what and whoever counts as science, as well as the plurality of
topics, methods, practices, institutions, and so on that can be grouped under this
uniform header. In fact, this is exactly the topic of this chapter.
276
Popper argued that proponents of Marxism, astrology, and psychoanalysis have
no difficulties finding confirming evidence. In their eyes “the world was full of
verifications of the theory. Whatever happened always confirmed it” (Popper,
2014: 45).
277
This does not mean, of course, that science can be “made up” in any which way:
boundary work can be a very creative practice, but is inevitably restricted (egg.
yet not determined) by (pre)existing repertoires of attributable meanings and
qualities (Gieryn, 1999: 18-23). Taylor similarly sees an “inexorable elasticity of
8
OTES
284
https://cryptocheilus.wordpress.com/crypto-nieuwsbox/comment-page-2/,
last retrieved May 3, 2016
285
See the comments section underneath the article, www.sciencepalooza.nl/
2012/08/waarom%E2%80%9Ccomplotdenken%E2%80%9D-niet-zomaar-
afgeserveerd-moet-worden/, last retrieved May 2, 2016
286
See the comments section underneath the article, http://www.sciencepalooza.
nl/2012/08/waarom%E2%80%9Ccomplotdenken%E2%80%9D-niet-zomaar-
afgeserveerd-moet-worden/, last retrieved May 2, 2016
287
Personal email by Liam, August 22, 2012
288
http://zaplog.nl/zaplog/article/waarom_complotdenken_niet_zomaar_
afgeserveerd_moet_worden, posted August 26, 2012, last retrieved May 3, 2016
289
Personal email by Anneke Bleeker, August 21, 2012
290
Fulbright Enrichment Seminar Invitation Letter, February 6, 2015
291
Dr. Montagnier discovered the HIV virus with his team at the Pasteur Institute
Paris, around the same time as Dr. Gallo. The two virologists ignited a major
scientific controversy about who actually was the first and sole finder of HIV,
which led to serious diplomatic tensions between the U.S. and France until the
dispute was resolved at the end of the 1980s by co-crediting both scientists and
splitting the royalties from their discovery equally.
292
http://modesofexistence.org/, under the header: “Phase Three. For the
negotiators: how can we find the most acceptable account through a series of
‘diplomatic’ negotiations?”, last retrieved May 10, 2016
The truth is out there. What was once the motto of an American science fiction TV-
series is now ordinary reality. Millions of people in the Western world no longer trust
their epistemic authorities (be it science, media or the government) and resort to al-
ternative explanations to account for what actually happened. Conspiracy theories are
formulated about the terrorist attacks of 9/11, about Big Pharma aggressively selling
their malign products, or about the Illuminati secretly ruling the entertainment indus-
try. They feature in popular culture as well: films, books and TV- series like The Matrix,
The Da Vinci Code, or The X-Files have attracted millions. And at any random party one
is bound to encounter someone who will not believe what the authorities tell us. Con-
spiracy theories and their followers are simply everywhere today.
But although conspiracy theories become more and more mainstream, a good socio-
logical understanding of their popularity remains limited by their consistent patholo-
gization in and outside academia. The stereotypical image of conspiracy theorists as
paranoid fanatics is prominent, and the ideas they have about reality are easily put aside
as irrational and preposterous. But is the suspicion of a conspiracy orchestrating world
affairs that farfetched when secretive government operations and corporate collusions
are a clear reality? Moreover, and this is the argument throughout the book, if we are
to understand why so many people engage with conspiracy theories nowadays, then
we need to explore the meanings they have for them.
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in the Dutch conspiracy milieu and following a
cultural sociological approach, Jaron Harambam explores such meanings in this book.
He shows what contemporary conspiracy theories are about, which people are in-
volved in the milieu, how they see themselves and what they actually do with these
ideas in their everyday lives. Reality turns out to be much more complex than com-
mon stereotypes would suggest… and yes… the truth really is out there…
Jaron Harambam works at the Rotterdam Centre for Cultural Sociology of the Erasmus University Rot-
terdam and defends his PhD thesis on conspiracy culture in the Netherlands in October 2017. He was
a Visiting Fellow at Northwestern University near Chicago, US (2015) and has published on conspiracy
culture, digital culture and online games in international journals like Cultural Sociology (2016), Public
Understanding of Science (2015), Information, Communication and Society (2013) and European Journal of
Cultural Studies (2011). He is editor of the Dutch peer-reviewed journal Sociologie where he co-edited a
special issue on actor-network theory (2014). Jaron is mostly interested in sociological phenomena at
the crossroads of science, religion, popular culture and media.