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samoan62's avatar

I always fall back on one of Sam Francis's reasons he dislikes conspiracy theories: that they create "the delusion of an invincible enemy that they spawn". Even if they are true, conspiracies seem to only be for the satisfaction of the believer since they usually fail to link them to the larger system they occurred in and don't provide any meaningful strategy to improve our system.

For example with JFK people get so caught up in the minutia of the "conspiracy" aspects and never move beyond that. Of course the CIA killed him, it should be obvious. The important part then is answering how we go about removing unaccountable, undemocratic power from our intelligence state.

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Michael P. Marpaung's avatar

I have a lot of "theories" in mind. But as for my favorite one which could be somewhat plausible, it would be the idea that Alexander the Great actually lost to King Porus in India and the Greek historians covered it up by saying that he won then allowed Porus to keep his kingdom. As you might expect, the proponents of this theory are Indians (at least as far as I can tell).

I found theories like that interesting because it shows that ancient history is something that we have to trust the source to an extent. For some reason, people who are hyper-critical about The Bible, going so far as to say that "Jesus don't exist" or "The Exodus never happened" doesn't extend that same level of skepticism to the existence of Alexander the Great or Julius Caesar.

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