Read Conspiracies: The Facts * the Theories * the Evidence Online
Authors: Andy Thomas
Tags: #Conspiracy Theories, #Social Science
memories and expressed the (surprising, even to him) view that
many of his subjects were simply relaying something that was
entirely real to them, whether they were physical or hal ucinogenic experiences, he was met with overt hostility and cal s for him to step down from his post. He narrowly avoided losing his job in
1994 after the dean of Harvard Medical School set up a committee
to investigate his methods and beliefs, but it was a sobering
lesson for other academics who might be considering delving
into alternative paradigms. Ironical y, Mack was killed in 2004
when an apparently drunken driver ran him over on a London
street – creating a whole slew of new ‘Manchurian candidate’ (i.e.
mind controlled) style conspiracy theories, implying that he was
assassinated by authorities afraid of a respectable figure getting too near the truth.2
Another professor, the US physicist Steven E Jones, also found
himself in hot water when he decided to use his skil s to examine the mystifying total destruction of the World Trade Center after the attacks on 9/11 (
see
chapter 6). After publishing a highly influential 2005 paper entitled ‘Why Indeed Did the WTC Buildings
Col apse?’ and presenting a seminar which supported the view that internal combustibles and explosives must have been deployed
to bring down the towers, Jones soon found himself suspended
from his position at Brigham Young University. This was followed
by scrutiny from both the American Association of University
Professors and the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, among other bodies, questioning the scientific skil s and ethics of a man formerly considered an expert in his field. Never able to
return to his post, Jones elected to take early retirement in 2007, but he refused to recant and was confident enough in his beliefs to 15
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help found the influential organization Scholars for 9/11 Truth & Justice. The curtailment of his career was another demonstration
of the grave consequences for those in the academic world who
decide to go public with unconventional views, no matter how
much they may be supported by empirical evidence (although
Jones was also attacked by a few truthers themselves, dismayed at his dismissal of the energy technology theories).
With funding and reputations hanging on the accepted, if
unspoken, agreement that certain lines of ‘acceptability’ will never be crossed and that peer consent must always be maintained, the
academic world ensures, as much as the extremist conspiracy
mindset, that nothing can threaten its self-imposed boundaries.
Those who choose to challenge this must embrace the hard reality
that trying to change anything from within will almost certainly
result in ostracization, leaving only the dreaded course of becoming a ‘maverick’, as Jones, Mack and others have discovered.
Those conspiracy theorists unswayed by the fanatical critics
from within their own ranks and who embrace the probability
that mainstream respectability will never be afforded to them
at least have the comfort that, as they are considered dissidents from the very start, there is little to lose by pressing on ful y with raising awareness for their heartfelt beliefs. The academic world, on the other hand, is forever hamstrung by fear for professional
credibility and the dilemma of whether to go public with
something that challenges peer prejudice. Yet history records that it is the mavericks who often propel human evolution the furthest.
Evidence, Not Beliefs
A common truthseeker retort heard towards those who refer to
conspiracy theories is: ‘It’s not conspiracy
theory
– it’s conspiracy FACT.’ Sometimes this is technical y true (9/11, for example,
was factual y a conspiracy, whether perpetrated by al-Qaeda or
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contrived as a covert ‘inside job’), but more often than not such a defensive exclamation is rooted only in opinion, which may
or may not be correct. This speaks greatly of the passionate and
sometimes impressive faith of truthers in their own convictions,
but doesn’t help convince an outside world conditioned to see
these people as delusional. A bridge across this divide, therefore, has to be found and, taking the oft-vaunted merits of the ‘scientific method’ as a model (albeit one often breached by scientists
themselves, masked with fudge factors and caveats), it is surely
only evidence, and not belief, that can be seriously considered
when trying to justify allegations of conspiracy. This does not
mean that a well-represented theory will necessarily be afforded
any more mainstream respect than the more unsupported ones,
to begin with at least, but it does make it more likely that its
plausibility will gradual y seep into the wider public consciousness (as with 9/11, David Kel y, JFK, etc.). Indeed, this slow filtration process may be the bottom line in identifying the wider consensus on specific conspiracy assertions.
It could be argued that the majority of people once appeared
to believe that the Sun revolved around the Earth, but that
‘consensus’ on this didn’t make it true. However, many minds had, in fact, long challenged the geocentric model, although its public expression was suppressed by religious and political authorities.
That much of the population will happily allow itself to go along with an official decree while it is more convenient or safer to do so isn’t the same as something having validity. When convincing
alternative information is presented, people are quicker to change their views on things than authorities would like us to believe. It may yet be that future history records a number of the supposed
‘fringe’ beliefs of our times as having turned out to be valid.
As the likes of Galileo showed in the face of institutional
condemnation, it is the diligent accumulation of proper evidence, guarded for posterity, that ultimately speaks for itself. The truth wil , in the end, surely be championed by this, rather than by the 17
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blinkered prejudices of a passing era, creating an even greater
imperative to gather sensible and convincing data if conspiracy
theory is ever going to become conspiracy fact. This requires an
approach that uses discernment and reasoned analysis. Neither
knee-jerk condemnation nor blind support for a hypothesis of
any kind is of the slightest help without the application of these qualities and the presentation of meaningful evidence.
iii) hoW far shoulD ConspiraCy
Theories go?
Paul McCartney: A Conspiracy Case Study
With the above observation about evidence in mind, the quest to
balance
apparent
evidence with discerning analysis is, conversely, where the dividing lines between potential y credible conspiracy
scenarios and wilder fantasies can become blurred, throwing up
the strangest synchronicities. A fascinating example (as astrologer John Green has pointed out) is the relatively lightweight but luridly obsessive theory that ex-Beatle Paul McCartney was, in reality,
killed in a car crash around 1966–7 but that his death was covered up, his place thereafter being taken by a stunningly convincing
and equal y talented lookalike. The suggestion runs that the
surviving Beatles didn’t want their careers destroyed so early by this tragedy, hence the plot, but that they couldn’t help themselves leaving tantalizing clues to the events in their lyrics and record sleeve artwork thereafter. The Paul-is-dead scandal began as an
apparent joke rumour that took off in US college campuses and
radio station phone-ins in 1969, but gathered credence as more
‘clues’ were found, rapidly growing into a global phenomenon.
On the surface, the McCartney hypothesis seems so ludicrous,
and indeed hilarious, that it doesn’t even fall onto the radar
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of many serious conspiracy believers. However, in one of the
weirder twists of fringe investigation, when reasons to support the theory are sought, even when the most tenuous and contentious
connections (and there are lots of these) are discarded, tantalizing and almost disturbing points of potential validation do somehow
manage to present themselves.
McCartney did, as a matter of record, have a minor moped
accident in 1965, resulting in a chipped tooth and lip scar, and in 1967 his Mini Cooper car was written off in a motorway crash.
There is evidence that the details of this latter incident were
indeed obfuscated, although this may simply have been to cover
up the possible involvement of hal ucinogenics – and the fact
that McCartney had loaned the car to a friend that night and was
therefore not present. Or so it is claimed.
Some of the many Paul-is-dead ‘clues’ are demonstrably bogus
or can be taken as curious chance. For example, the second line of the number plate on the VW Beetle car behind the zebra crossing
on 1969’s
Abbey Road
sleeve reads ‘281F’ and is said by some to mean that Paul would have been be 28 ‘if’ he had lived (1F being
read as IF) – but actual y he was then 27. Likewise, the mumbled
coda of 1968’s ‘I’m So Tired’ is often taken as ‘Paul is a dead man, miss him, miss him, miss him’, but in truth the master tapes
reveal the line as ‘Monsieur, monsieur, how about another one’.
Meanwhile, the claimed (and almost unintelligible) spoken phrase
‘I buried Paul’ at the end of 1967’s ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ is, according to John Lennon anyway, simply ‘cranberry sauce’.
What, however, do we make of the fact that, even recently,
compellingly convincing and professional y qualified forensic
comparisons of photographs before and after the supposed
time of the fabled accident have been produced that apparently
demonstrate quite a different facial and head structure in the
post-1966 McCartney, along with other anomalies to do with
height and voice tones?3 Also, some of the numerous and more
substantial ‘clues’ from the Beatles pantheon are admittedly very 19
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odd. Is it merely coincidence that the repeated spoken refrain of 1968’s ‘Revolution 9’ played backwards produces the uncannily
clear phrase ‘turn me on, dead man’? Or that placing a mirror in
the middle of the bass drum on the front of 1967’s
Sgt. Pepper’s
Lonely Hearts Club Band
album sleeve produces, unquestionably, the phrase ‘one he die’, interspersed with Roman numerals (which
some say give the date of McCartney’s death, November 1966)?
The same picture also includes, among its many celebrity cut-outs, an image of arch black magician Aleister Crowley, who famously
recommended that learning to speak backwards or in code was
key to the path of spiritual mastery.
McCartney himself is often singled out on the later album
sleeves: he is the only one with his back to the camera on the
rear cover of
Sgt. Pepper’s
; he wears a black carnation in 1967’s
Magical Mystery Tour
ballroom sequence, when the other three wear red ones; most famously, only he is bare-footed on the
zebra crossing cover shot of
Abbey Road
(allegedly an allegorical
‘funeral procession’). There are numerous other examples,
endlessly pored over by Beatles fanatics, while several strange
and morbid lyrical references also intrigue. ‘He blew his mind out in a car’ in 1967’s ‘A Day in the Life’ is but one example, or the almost blatantly direct spoken line ‘He hit a light pole and we
better go to see a surgeon’ in 1968’s ‘Revolution 9’, together with its sung alternative, ‘You were in a car crash, and you lost your hair’, from the same year’s ‘Don’t Pass Me By’. Some say the car
crash references are more to do with the death of wealthy socialite and Beatles friend Tara Browne, who
did
die by hitting a lamp post in 1966 – the claimed inspiration for the ‘A Day in the Life’
verse – but the overt and repeated car crash themes elsewhere
do seem oddly highlighted. There is a multitude of websites and
books available which explore much more.4 Taken together, it
seems that there is, at the very least, an intriguingly unusual stock of coincidences that are hard to dismiss entirely when trying to
assess this especial y peculiar conspiracy theory.
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What could it all mean? Could the death of such a prominent
public figure as McCartney real y be covered up so successful y?
Even less likely, could the substitution of someone so like him,
with almost identical talents, be effected so perfectly that not
only the public but even his close friends and relatives didn’t
notice? (The extreme end of this theory runs that the somewhat
disastrous introduction of Heather Mil s into McCartney’s life in the early 2000s was a deliberate attempt to stop his now-doubting doppelganger from lifting the lid on his real identity, and that
covert forces employed her as a romantic trap through which
to subject him to mind-control techniques which guaranteed
his silence – of such darkly entertaining confections are some