Conspiracy narrative

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Conspiracy narrative
Type 1 Fakeology Technology Research
Type 2 Psyops
Year Jan. 2018 (start)
Author Faye
Discussion To discuss about this topic go to
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Topics
Narrative management Logic of PsyOps
Information
Fakeologist [ab 1]
Cluesforum [CF 1]

The term conspiracy narrative describes the Fakeological hypothesis that the manifestation of conspiracy theories within the discours of Military Psychological Operations are not naturally occuring effects triggered by the PsyOp but a professionally designed and managed integral, structural and strategic constituents of Military PsyOps.
The Military Intelligence Apparatus has at their command the necessary infrastructure, technology, resources and funds, to guarantee the maintenance of conspiracy narratives over decades, as the examples of the JFK assassination and the PsyOp 9/11 show us.

Objectives

Conspiracy narratives are designed to
1. prevent, inhibit, prohibit the identification of what really happens, who did it, what the motivations were, what the aims are;
2. expand the impact of the PsyOp within society by producing material goods, amusement articles, music, films, etc., entertainment, etc. based on the content of the conspiracy narratives;
3. transform institutions or parts of such, e.g. laws, rights, arts, educational curricula, etc.;
4. establish new, better conditions for the Dispositif of Power as a result of the PsyOp. E.g. symbolic or territorial privileges, concentration of legislative or executive powers, culminating in the State of Exception and the totalitarian rule after the PsyOp 9/11.

Informal distinction of conspiracy narratives

Event

Event conspiracy narratives aim to disinform, deceive, manipulate and alter the public perception about a Military Psychological operation which appears as an event or a series of connected events. Examples: JFK assassination, 9/11, Apollo program.

Discours

Discours conspiracy narratives aim to dominate, shift, alter or exchange the characteristics of the discours in a particular field of knowledge, social life, private life, work, etc. Examples: Space travel, serial killers, Transgender Agenda.

Informal genres [1] of conspiracy narrative

Mystery

Year Date Type 1 Type 2 Official Name Perp/Group Description
1872 12/05 boat incident mystery Mystery of Mary Celeste Complete crew of the ship Mary Celeste disappears in the Atlantic Ocean, never to be found again. Zal rule: The Mystery of the Mary Celeste/Phantom Ship (1935), The Ship That Died (1938). Wallace rule: In Search of... (1980), The True Story of the Mary Celeste (2007). [ab 2], [MSM 1]

Disaster

Year Date Type 1 Type 2 Official Name Perp/Group Description
1853 01/06 train crash BBS Bennie Piece train disaster Franklin Pierce 11 year old son of Franklin Pierce, later 14th president of the US, killed in suspicious train crash in Massachusetts. [ab 3], [MSM 2]
[2]
[3]

War

Year Date Type 1 Type 2 Official Name Perp/Group Description
1962 10/14 nuclear scare geopolitical
Cold War
Cuban missile crisis John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Fidel Castro
Che Guevara
Regarded as the moment in which the Cold War came closest to turning into a nuclear conflict. [HB 1], [MM 1]

Terror

Legend

Crime

Drama

Tragedy

Science fiction

Informal themes of conspiracy narratives

Alienland

La-la Land

Controlled opposition

New World Order

Mind control

Lone gunman

Alien races

Informal features of conspiracy narrative

Fascination

Fear

Conspiracy candy

Cover-up

Discredit By Association

Disinformation

Guilt By Association

Predictive programming

Smoking gun

Discredit By Association

Guilt By Association

Cover-up

Informal methods of conspiracy narratives

Deception

Overload

Confusion

Controlled conspiracy media outlet

Conspiracy fatigue

Limited hangout

Disinformation

Rabbit trail

Misdirection

See also

References

Fakeologist

Cluesforum

Hoaxbusters

Miles Mathis

Mainstream

Other