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Conspiracy Theories

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Conspiracy theories are all here, but not just lined up to be ridiculed and dismissed. For among the absurd conspiracy theories currently proliferating on the internet, there are nuggets of real research about real conspiracies waiting to be mined. Fully sourced and referenced, this book is a serious examination of a fascinating phenomenon.

159 pages, Hardcover

First published December 1, 2000

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About the author

Robin Ramsay

24 books3 followers

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5 stars
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33 (41%)
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Nandakishore Mridula.
1,352 reviews2,702 followers
September 17, 2020
I thought this was an analysis of conspiracy theories. It's not. it seems to be a book-length opinion piece on how and why conspiracy theories are generated. Boring.
Profile Image for Dimitris Hall.
392 reviews70 followers
August 7, 2016
"Conspiracies are real and by no means necessarily the product of a paranoid imagination. If this little book has a single message, this is it. But, as the Kennedy assassination showed, there is not just one big over-arching conspiracy. There are many smaller conspiracies, some of them competing, interlocking, overlapping..."

Insightful little book that shows how conspiracies are run-of-the-mill popular politics. Research into them, however, is undermined by the "conspiracy theory" and "conspiracy theorist" stereotype which has been fueled by deliberate government disinformation and distraction tactics (such as alien abductions and a great part of the UFO conspiracy paraphilology: who's going to care about the real and very obvious conspiracies when there's aliens out to get us?), propaganda and your standard simplistic, absurd, "over-arching" conspiracy theories: Jewish bankers, Illuminati, Masons etc.
Profile Image for Matthew Broman.
41 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2014
it was alright, it was very well written and cited in my opinion even thought I disagree with alot of her views on the many theories out there. I would describe this author as a leftist liberal type and a non-believer in the theories she discusses in this book which makes it ironic because the book is about "conspiracy theories". But, as stated before, I will give her credit because the book is well written and very well referenced and opened me up to a new perspective on these issues even if I don't personally agree with her
Profile Image for Michael McGuinness.
20 reviews3 followers
June 7, 2012
This is an interesting book in that it is one of the few books that looks at the conspiracy theory phenomenon from a broad left point of view. It cuts through the bullshit very effectively while at the same time taking seriously those aspects of the modern world and the political system which are conspiratorial. This is hard to find in conspiracy theory literature, which usually takes a sensationalist tone, or a patronisingly debunking one.
Profile Image for Marlaina McCauslin.
385 reviews6 followers
July 25, 2010
I picked up this little jem at a Barnes and Noble clearance rack and now i realize why it was there. I thought that it was about each conspiracys and the facts towards them. However, it was about how they couldn't possibily be true. i hated this book and wanted to burn it in the flames of Hell
Profile Image for Johanne.
1,075 reviews14 followers
November 26, 2012
very interesting, the basic premise being that whilst we are busy being distracted by huge conspiracy ideas - (the ridiculous and the vaguely plausible) we are not noticing what and who is actually pulling the strings.

Off to find out more about Betty Trout and her line dancing aliens :-)

Profile Image for Ajay Ajay.
Author 31 books12 followers
January 22, 2015
Too much of things, not proven, had just been picked up in this work. Even empirical verifications are not much, and the book seems to be depending too much on own deduction or hearsay!!

Those who like this theme may still pick it up for understanding an alternate world, where such possibilities still occur.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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