Are Conspiracy Theorists Infiltrating the Media?
by Michael Posner
Ever heard
of a Haarpicane? How about a Haarpiquake?
According to
conspiracy theorist Nelson Thall, the recent tragedy visited upon
Haiti was no mere earthquake. It was something more sinister. In
his view, High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP)
technology destroyed the island. Why? Because it's a pawn in the
ongoing battle between what he calls the Old World Order (loosely,
the Anglo-American Empire) and the New World Order (loosely, the
European Union and the Vatican).
George Freund,
a colleague in the city's booming conspiracy brotherhood, stops
short of attributing the Haitian quake to tectonic weaponry. But
he notes that the country's "potential oil and mineral wealth
make [it] plum for the picking," and that a bright plasma ball
(doubtless caused by a HAARP weapon) was photographed on the eve
of the quake in the skies over Haiti.
Mr. Thall,
a.k.a. Lenny Bloom, and Mr. Freund are just two of a growing group
of Torontonians who reject the "facts" they say we're
spoon-fed, in favour of more unsettling truths.
They're not
alone. As British writer David Aaronovitch observes in his new book,
Voodoo
Histories, the Western world now lives in an age of "fashionable
conspiracism," its garments feverishly promoted via Internet
forums, blogs and, increasingly, mainstream media. Coast-to-Coast
a late-night radio talk show is syndicated on more
than 500 North American stations. Conspiracy culture has even infiltrated
TV prime time with Conspiracy Theory, courtesy of former
Minnesota governor and professional wrestler Jesse Ventura, and
The Conspiracy Files from the BBC, erstwhile bastion of establishment
thinking.
But conspiracy
theory seems to be nowhere more fashionable than in Toronto.
Mr. Thall (as
Bloom) and Mrs. Jane Steele host Shock Talk, a weekly Internet
radio show. From the same downtown studios, Mr. Freund webcasts
his own show (Conspiracy Cafe), as does Timothy Spearman
(Shaking a Spear). They, too, cover the conspiracy waterfront,
including "airplane chemtrails" (Western governments are
secretly spraying us with toxins) and the veracity of Barack Obama's
U.S. citizenship.
On Zoomer 740
AM Radio, Richard Syrett's Conspiracy Show serves up other
main courses, from who really killed John and Bobby Kennedy (hint:
not lone gunmen) to what actually caused the buildings of the World
Trade Center to collapse on 9/11 (hint: not fires ignited by jet
fuel). Mr. Syrett dismissed from CFRB last January after
running a segment on Mr. Obama's birth-certificate issue
also helms a new 26-episode TV series, The Conspiracy Show,
which will soon be syndicated (with the radio version) in the U.S.
On air, Mr.
Syrett tends to adopt a sober, just-curious approach to conspiracy
theories, but if you want a true believer, Radio 640's Gary Bell
is your man. The Spaceman, his nom de microphone, sallies forth
rhetorically for three hours every Saturday night, specializing
in arcane numerology and the shadowy backstage cabal known as the
Illuminati. According to Mr. Bell, it runs the world.
If Toronto
is, in fact, the urban hotbed of conspiracy theory, it may
be explained by the same theory that accounts for why so many Canadian
comedians were able to find success in the United States: We live
close enough to the empire to understand it and critique it, but
are never really part of it.
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the rest of the article
February
24, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 The Globe and Mail
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