Read Conspiracies: The Facts * the Theories * the Evidence Online
Authors: Andy Thomas
Tags: #Conspiracy Theories, #Social Science
conspiracy theories made.) Are the compelling patterns formed
by all the clues and mysteries, then, merely a crazed example of
‘apophenia’ at work (‘the spontaneous perception of connections
and meaningfulness of unrelated phenomena’, according to the
online
Skeptic’s Dictionary
), as John Green has suggested, or is there a middle-ground solution?5
Those who find themselves unable to sweep aside all the inter-
connecting references to a mysterious accident have suggested that there might have been a certain level of reality to the dropping-in of the clues, in that the whole thing was nothing more than
a publicity stunt that got out of hand. The Beatles themselves
continual y denied this, with ever-wearier and characteristic
sarcasm, but at the same time it is well-documented that their
Apple enterprise, conceived in 1967 and official y founded in
1968 as the band’s record label and promotional outlet, was often staffed by eccentrics or chemical y enhanced opportunists. Could
others have manipulated some of the artwork decisions, at least
(as their involvement wouldn’t explain the lyrical references), even if
Sgt. Pepper’s
pre-dated the full arrival of Apple? If nothing else, it is possible that the rumours may have been actively, if quietly, encouraged to proliferate: sales of Beatles albums notably soared when the Paul-is-dead hysteria peaked. It is not hard to imagine
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the likes of the ever-cynical John Lennon deciding to stir the
madness further (as his mischievous and self-referencing ‘Glass
Onion’ in 1968 proves: ‘The walrus was Paul’, etc.).
Would anyone real y go to such lengths (including, apparently,
reconstructing McCartney’s entire skull) just to shift a few more LPs, however? Beyond the perhaps secondary gain of the sales
boost, others have suggested a more serious mandate to the whole
affair. Even now there are some who consider that the whole Beatles phenomenon was in fact a state-sponsored social experiment
in seeing how far youthful minds could be engineered into
obsessively following (and copying by example) the development
of fresh-faced entertainers through days of innocent fun into mass hysteria, passing to drug-induced fantasies and world infamy
(Lennon’s Beatles-bigger-than-Christ furore) and, final y, into
recrimination and disil usionment (the Beatles’ break-up). By this, the dangerous and inherently authority-challenging new creative
energy of an entire generation may have been successful y neutered, having been taken on a ride from hope to disempowerment. To
such morose theorists, the wonderful music and exhilarating
journey through the 1960s was one big, if artistical y valid, dirty trick. Seen through the lens of the Beatles’ odyssey being a hugely ambitious ‘psy-ops’ (psychological operations) experiment, it can be better understood how promoting McCartney as a kind of
fallen-but-resurrected messianic figure in the religious tradition might be perceived as an important component of a darker and
more all-encompassing design.
Madness? Very possibly. This discussion is not included to
support any particular belief around the Paul-is-dead theory,
but employed as an important demonstration that anomalous
phenomena and seemingly unsolvable conundrums can some-
times arise when seeking validation for certain hypotheses. Often, corroborative evidence exists nowhere beyond the fanciful mind
of an individual and perhaps some easily influenced supporters.
Yet, on other occasions, surprisingly compelling pieces of data
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what is conspiracy theory?
present themselves, and then the journey must begin to work out
what they mean. Is it simply apophenia conjuring patterns out of
unrelated but coincidental y synchronistic events, or is a genuine phenomenon making itself known? In truth, it must always be
the continuous accumulation of non-subjective evidence, and a
solid inner logic, that tip the balance. That above all is what must be sought when trying to identify real conspiracies and cover-ups. The McCartney case thus intrigues, but doesn’t ful y pass
above the probability threshold, leaving it in a curious grey area of its own. Other examples, however, even in the absence of firm
conclusions, can certainly be seen to weight the scales in definite directions, as shall be demonstrated in later chapters.
As for McCartney himself, after a sullen silence on the issue for some months following the initial hysteria, he was final y cornered by journalists who arrived at his farmhouse in late 1969, and
the singer was eventual y happy to confirm that he wasn’t dead.
Curiously, he never said
Paul McCartney
wasn’t dead, though.
Because, of course, if the 1969 version was in fact a replacement for the real man, having successful y taken on his identity, assets and talents, then he would hardly be likely to admit it. And so
the conundrum remains. McCartney – if it was still McCartney
– should have known, regardless of one’s own experience, that
if the public wants to believe you are dead, then you are, in its eyes, dead, and anything beyond that is not your business. Why
would people choose to believe the world runs in such a nefarious fashion, though? Perhaps because it’s simply more fun that way,
but also, maybe, for deeper reasons.
The Roots of Mistrust
In Ralph L Rosnow and Gary Alan Fine’s 1976 essay ‘The Paul
McCartney Rumor’, one of the key reasons they give for so many
people being drawn to the whole Paul-is-dead phenomenon was a
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lack of trust in authority. They also point out that the assassination of John F Kennedy (
see
chapter 5) and the clearly unsatisfactory Warren Commission report on his death (which essential y
dismissed wider conspiracy speculation and settled on the lone
gunman theory), together with the subsequent eliminations of
further inspirational figures such as Robert Kennedy and Martin
Luther King, had left an entire generation with an underlying
cynicism that anyone willing to stand up and shine might be
destined for similar martyrdom. The apparent demise of such an
inspirational youth culture figure as McCartney thus appeared
to give him more societal validation. Though genuine tears
were shed by fans over his perceived passing, it also elevated the artist to an untouchable level of sainthood, a mythic figure who
would forever be unsullied by an otherwise inevitable decline
into old age and mediocrity. At the same time, this also meant,
on a psychological level, that public figures became essential y
replaceable – one might be brought down, but another would
always appear to take its place.
Thus, beyond the general y acknowledged entertainment value
that the seemingly preposterous McCartney case undoubtedly
brought with it (finding the clues became a compulsive hobby
for some, while others simply enjoyed the very idea that such
an ambitiously elaborate plot might be hatched at all), this new
cynicism meant that the belief that someone so famous might
die and then
actually
be replaced by a lookalike – with all the necessary deceptions to support it – was not as ridiculous a notion as might have seemed a decade before. After al , if the grassy knoll witnesses could be ignored and sidelined, and blind eyes turned
from all the many anomalies surrounding Lee Harvey Oswald
and his own mysterious killer, Jack Ruby, then, in the minds of
many (the McCartney rumour was believed by millions across the
USA in particular), anything was now possible, however bleakly
underhand. This seam of mistrust, felt especial y by youthful
minds, had been further fed by the shockingly violent put-down
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of the 1968 student peace protests at Columbia University, and
would intensify further with the acceleration of the Vietnam
conflict, followed by the proven conspiracy behind the Richard
Nixon/Watergate affair (
see
chapter 4). This in particular would quickly infect all generations with doubt about political leaders and stir a new awareness of the lies they might be being fed in
other areas.
Herein lies the underlying stimulus that fuels most conspiracy
theories: the seemingly unending combination of demonstrable
falsehoods and unsolved mysteries that have been given ever more
public exposure since the 1960s have resulted in a loss of faith that has gradual y stripped away the quaintly innocent presumption
that authority figures have our best interests at heart. The media façade that attempts to convince us that those cases which blast
apart with grand revelations are the extreme exceptions to
establishment honesty (in the UK, the 2009 MPs expenses scandal,
for instance, or, in the USA, Watergate) results in a society that may idly appear to go along with it, but, deep inside, the general mistrust is palpable and entrenched. This most probably explains
why pol s show that a remarkable number of people now doubt the
evidence about even something as historical y significant as the
Moon landings (
see
chapter 4) – and why around half the world’s population is now prepared to believe that the US government lied about an event as huge as 9/11. Consequently, the development of
widespread beliefs that a covert ruling elite may wish to curtail the freedom of its citizens, and even want to wipe them all out (
see
chapter 8), becomes more understandable.
It might therefore be tempting to psychoanalyse all conspiracy
theories away, as the academic world has attempted to do, but
the crunch comes with the more honest recognition that actual
evidence
does
exist to support some of the areas in question.
Pushing this aside, in the light of the increasingly prominent role conspiracy theory is establishing in the average person’s thought processes (although they may not recognize it as such), is unwise 25
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and unhelpful. If authority is unhappy with being so mistrusted,
then it only has itself to blame. Only by exposing and properly
examining all the evidence around contentious events in a spirit
of reconciliation will this unhealthy social time-bomb be defused, revealing the real truth, however uncomfortable it may be.
As a last word on the McCartney phenomenon, it should be
observed that his case is a novel exception to the rule. McCartney himself (or whoever he now is) might wryly take umbrage at the
fact that conspiracy theories around famous figures usual y have
it that they
didn’t
real y die, for example, Elvis Presley, Doors singer Jim Morrison, even Adolf Hitler. The emotional denial
that often sets in when cherished or, conversely, hated figures
pass on (especial y if there is the slightest doubt surrounding
the circumstances of their deaths) frequently results in rumours
of their survival with stories that they have been seen setting off for secret lives free from the public’s gaze. When attachments
are made to figures that become part of society’s framework, the
thought that they are no longer there can unsettle the geography
of some people’s lives, even when that figure may have been
abusive. The conspiracy theories offer a safety net, a hope for a kind of afterlife that leaves them feeling more secure. But poor
McCartney instead has to endure the infuriating knowledge that
some people feel happier believing that he
did
actual y die; that way, he remains an ethereal figure of lost genius, instead of the miscreant who went on to perpetrate ‘The Frog Chorus’.
John Lennon’s own general y undenied martyrdom at the
hands of a psychotic gunman in 1980 has given rise to a number
of conspiracy theories of another kind, however, with many
believing that killer Mark Chapman was under the influence of
another Manchurian candidate-style mind-control programme
sponsored by authorities keen to see a curtailment of the
singer’s comeback onto the world stage, with all his somewhat
inconvenient politics of peace. This il ustrates, once again, that virtual y every conspiracy notion one can imagine is subscribed
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to by someone, somewhere. The question is, where does it stop?
And
should
the process be stopped if there is evidence of any kind to consider?
Avoiding Hard Reality?
One of the secondary gains from subscribing to certain conspir-
acy theories is that they enable believers to put themselves at a more comfortable remove from harder everyday concerns. Some
are drawn to belief in oppressive deception, either because (as
previously noted) this situation is familiar to them from their
own childhood, or because it fires them with a motivation to
kick against something and thus develop their personality in new
directions when this stimulus is otherwise lacking in their daily lives. However, the attraction to a good-against-evil psychological battle, while not without usefulness, can also result in an avoidance of attending to practical matters closer at hand.