Sunday, April 5, 2020

Why People Believe in Conspiracy Theories




Following is a recent email, name withheld, sincere I am sure, and typical of what we now often see in the New and hardly improved Churches of God or those disillusioned with it all.  In it I was reminded...

"C’mon man-Coronavirus?

Did you eat the Coronavirus poison apple?  Are you wearing a face mask and practicing social distancing?  If so, I can guarantee that you watch the pitiful propaganda “news” on television, where your brain is turned into mush.

Try “nofakenews.net” for a totally different perspective.  Wake up world!  Television “news” is mass propaganda and you are being massively deceived.  This entire common cold called Coronavirus is nothing more than a distraction from some other sinister evil being perpetrated on humanity, by a few individuals at the top of the pyramid of power, control and super $wealth.

Can you believe  false statistics?  No!  Can you believe the “news” media?  No!  Can you believe governments? No!  Can you believe false positives of the medical profession? No!  Can you believe the “Center for Disease Control? No!  Can you believe the vaccine industry?  No!  Can you believe the pharmaceutical empire? No!

Distrust in the humans in power and institutions of men is very widespread.

Is there an answer?  Common humans have been bulldozed by madmen in power, from the beginning of human history and it still thrives in life on earth.  War is always for ulterior motives and is always orchestrated by sick minded sadistic humans in power.

Coronavirus is nothing more than mass-deception and distraction for other hidden motives by psychos in power.

Don’t be deceived!"
and...

 Social Distancing?
"Have you not lived your entire life without social distancing?  I am... (withheld)  and have never ever heard the term “ social distancing” in my life.  Who is behind this demonic scam? You can rest assured that television “news” is the primary source of fearmongering.  Who are these freaks that promote fear and why?

What a sick world!  Why are grocery stores so complacent and insisting that customers practice 6-feet distance apart?  Oh the magic number of “6.”

Well folks, you have been intentionally hoodwinked, and this entire Coronavirus scam is from the pits of hell."
 Mark Armstrong's rant also comes to mind and it is fascinating to see how far right, political and conspiratorial many if not most of the surviving splinters have become. Long gone are the days of "non-worldly"  participation in the brawl we call government, by the churches of God it seems.   
"There has been a growing interest in recent years in why people believe in conspiracy theories. Recent controversial examples of such theories include the belief that terrorist attacks and mass shootings were staged events orchestrated by the U.S. government. Other examples include the belief that the pharmaceutical industry intentionally spreads diseases or that vaccines cause illness rather than prevent them.
While it might seem like these beliefs are rare or even pathological, research has shown that they are surprisingly common. A study found that half of all Americans believe in at least one conspiracy theory.1

What Is a Conspiracy Theory?

A conspiracy theory can be defined as the belief that there are groups that meet in secret to plan and carry out malevolent goals.
What explains this common and often deep-rooted belief that powerful, sinister, and secretive groups are conspiring to deceive others — particularly in a day and age where we have more access to information and facts that might debunk many of these ideas? Researchers suspect that there are a number of psychological mechanisms that contribute to these beliefs, many of which may be the result of evolutionary processes.2
In a world where you might feel powerless and alienated, it can be appealing to believe that there are forces plotting against your interests. Once these beliefs take root, cognitive biases and mental shortcuts reinforce and strengthen them. Many of the same factors that fuel other types of problematic thinking, such as a belief in the paranormal, also contribute to conspiracy theories. And while such paranoid ideas are not new, the internet has helped transform the way and the speed in which they are spread.

In order to understand why people believe in these conspiracies, it is important to explore some of the psychological explanations and the potential effects these beliefs have.

Explanations

Researchers suggest that there are a number of different reasons why people believe in conspiracy theories. Many of these explanations boil down to three key driving factors:
  • A need for understanding and consistency (epistemic)3
  • A need for control (existential)
  • A need to belong or feel special (social)3

Epistemic Reasons

Epistemic explanations refer to the desire to derive certainty and understanding. The world can be a confusing place filled with events that may seem dangerous and chaotic. People are driven to explain the things that happen in the world around them. Doing so helps them build up a consistent, stable, and clear understanding of how the world works.

Factors That Increase Conspiracy Belief:

  • In situations involving large-scale events, where more mundane or small-scale explanations seem inadequate
  • In situations where people experience distress over uncertainty
When people encounter disparate information, it is only natural to look for explanations that connect the dots. Conspiracy theories offer explanations that provide this connection. They also suggest that the underlying causes are hidden from public view. When confusing things happen, believers can then assume that it is because they are being intentionally deceived by outside forces.
There is also a connection between conspiracy beliefs and educational levels. Lower educational status tends to be associated with higher levels of conspiracy belief.
Having lower analytical abilities and less tolerance for uncertainty also play a role. As a result, people turn to conspiracy theories to provide explanations for events that seem confusing or frightening.
The confirmation bias can also play a role in the development of conspiracy belief. People are naturally inclined to seek out information that confirms their existing beliefs.4 So when they run across a theory that supports something that they already think is true, they are more likely to believe the information is also true.

Existential Reasons

There is also evidence that people turn to conspiracy theories as a way of feeling safer and more in control.5 When people feel threatened in some way, detecting sources of danger can be a way of coping with anxiety.

What The Research Suggests:

  • One study found that people who feel psychologically and sociopolitically disempowered are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories.
  • Another study found that people are also more likely to believe in conspiracies when they are experiencing anxiety.
While researchers understand these existential motivations, there is little evidence that believing in these theories actually helps people satisfy their need to feel control and autonomy. In fact, by believing in these theories, people may actually be less likely to engage in actions that would potentially boost their sense of control (such as voting or participating in political activity).
So while people may be drawn to conspiracy theories as a way of making sense of the world and feeling more in control of their own destiny, the long-term effects may actually leave people feeling more disempowered than ever before.

Social Reasons

People can also be motivated to believe in conspiracy due to social reasons. Some researchers have hypothesized that by believing in conspiracies that cast out-groups as the opposition, people are able to feel better about themselves and their own social group.2 Those who believe in the conspiracy feel that they are the “heroes” of the story, while those who are conspiring against them are “the enemy.”

People Believe In Conspiracies When:

  • They are on the “losing” side of a political issue
  • They have a lower social status due to income or ethnicity
  • They have experienced social ostracism
  • They are prejudiced against “enemy” groups they perceive as powerful
Such findings suggest that conspiracy belief might arise as a sort of defense mechanism. When people feel disadvantaged, they are motivated to find ways to boost their own self-perceptions. Blaming others by linking them to malevolent plots provides a scapegoat on which to lay blame, thus improving how conspiracy believers view themselves.
The belief in conspiracies is also rooted in what is referred to as collective narcissism. This is the belief that your own social group is better, yet less appreciated, by other people.
People who feel that they or their social group have been victimized are also less likely to believe in government institutions and more likely to believe in conspiracies.
The way in which people encounter and share these ideas should also be noted. It’s easy to dismiss a story shared by a random source that you don’t trust. But when multiple people in your social circle who you do know and trust all seem to believe the same story, it starts to seem less like a silly conspiracy and more like a trusted fact. Sharing these kinds of stories within our networks gives social credence to such conspiratorial thinking.

Effects

While researchers have some good theories about why people believe in conspiracies, it is less clear what the ultimate effects of these beliefs are.
What researchers have found is that while these beliefs are motivated by a desire to understand, exert control, and feel socially connected, these aren’t the effects people are deriving from their beliefs.3 Rather than fulfilling these needs, believing in conspiracies seems to reinforce feelings of confusion, isolation, disenfranchisement, and loneliness. It is a destructive cycle - negative feelings contribute to the belief in conspiracies, yet the belief in conspiracies results in negative feelings.
Believing in conspiracy theories erodes people’s trust in their government, their leaders, and their institutions. It also diminishes trust in science and research itself. This distrust may discourage people from participating in their social worlds. It might also cause people to stop seeing themselves as valuable contributors to society.
Rather than helping people cope with their feelings of social alienation and political disenfranchisement, conspiracy beliefs seem to create a cycle of distrust that leads to even greater disempowerment.

Risks

Believing in things that are not true poses a number of dangers, which can have real effects that impact individual behavior and ultimately have a ripple impact on society as a whole. A resurgence in Measles outbreaks in the U.S. has been largely attributed to a refusal by some individuals to vaccinate — a refusal that stems largely from the conspiratorial belief that vaccines cause autism and other health ailments.6
Failing to address dangerous misbeliefs presents a potential danger to public health and even the political process itself. Faulty beliefs lead can lead people to not vaccinate, not vote, or, in some rare cases, even engage in dangerous or violent behavior.

Overcoming Conspiracy Theory Beliefs

In the age of disinformation, finding ways to refute conspiracy beliefs seems more important than ever. Social platforms claim to be buckling down on those who peddle and profit off of conspiracies, but is it really possible to change such views once they’ve taken root?
One problem faced when trying to disprove conspiracy theories is that people who hold these beliefs also tend to suspect that there are factions engaged in covering up these activities. Those trying to debunk the mistaken beliefs are then viewed as simply being actors in the conspiracy itself.
While it might be tempting to simply mock conspiracy theories, especially the more ridiculous ones, this usually causes believers to dig in their heels and deepen their commitment to their belief.
Many factors that contribute to conspiratorial beliefs, such as educational background and personality, are not easily or quickly changed. Researchers have found one tactic, however, that is effective — encouraging believers to pursue their goals.7
People tend to take one of two approaches in the pursuit of goals.
  • Those who are "promotion-focused" believe that they have the power and control to shape their future.
  • People who are "prevention-focused," on the other hand, are more focused on protecting what they already have rather than on achieving their goals.

Feeling In Control Reduces Conspiratorial Thinking

So what does this have to do with conspiracy beliefs? Researchers found that promotion-focused people were more skeptical and less likely to buy into conspiracies.7 Why? People who believe that the future hinges on their own actions have a great deal of personal agency and control. It is this sense of autonomy and agency that makes people less likely to believe in secret plots and nefarious plans.
What the researchers also discovered was that giving people a nudge in the direction of a more promotion-focused mindset could actually reduce belief in conspiracies.7 In practical terms, promoting messages that help people feel more in control can minimize conspiratorial thinking.

Write It Down

Researchers had study participants write down their aspirations, which helped them focus on their goals and what they could do to achieve them. This simple activity encourages people to take a more promotion-focused mindset and reduces conspiracy belief.
While researchers have been able to reduce conspiratorial thinking in the lab, how applicable is this in the real world? In workplace settings, managers might employ this strategy to help minimize water-cooler worries, office gossip, and interpersonal friction. Regular discussions that center on employee goals and strategies to achieve those goals can help keep workers feeling more in control and less subject to corporate whims.
In terms of public health, organizations might start by promoting messages focused on realistic things people can do to take control of their own health. Building this sort of action-oriented mindset may help discourage belief in health-related conspiracies and build greater trust between medical organizations and health consumers.

A Word From Verywell

Conspiratorial thinking can be problematic and dangerous (Pizzagate, anyone?), but this does not mean that skepticism of institutions, marketing, and media messaging is not warranted. After all, not all conspiracies are false (the Tuskegee experiments and Iran-Contra are just a couple of examples).

As you encounter information from various sources, it is important to be able to distinguish between false conspiracy theories and real threats to personal security. While it may be tempting to ridicule conspiracy believers, remember that these sort of beliefs are actually pretty common — you probably even believe in some of them. In a world where people feel the very real effects of power imbalances and distrust in leadership, conspiracy theories will naturally flourish, which means discouraging this type of thinking is not always easy.

27 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sorry Dennis but I didn't read all of this but I do want to make a comment to those who worry so much about these conspiracy theories.

First I want to state that being in the cog I have several friends who spend way too much time worrying about these things. From contrails, to black helicopters and now covid-19.

My response is always "So what? Even if it's all true there's nothing that we can do about it. So spending so much time looking into these things is futile."

There's more important things to use our minds for, like supporting and spending time with our families. Worrying about things that we can't control just robs our kids and spouse from time with us.

What is especially strange is that they all believe these things are leading up to Jesus' coming, so I just don't understand the need to worry about this stuff.

Of course they'll claim that they're not worried, that they're just keeping informed, but they are deceiving themselves. Who cares if big brother is watching us? Who cares if they are influencing the weather with chemtrails? The whole system is too large for us to do anything other than live our lives as best that we can.

It's not as if there's another continent out there that a few thousand of us can move to like they did 300 years ago.

Quit your worring. Stay informed but don't dwell on things that you have no control over.

Does it really take away from your rights to wear a mask? To stay away from crowds for a few months?

What if this is real and your doubts, or stubborn refusal to listen results in your father, mother or child dying of the "common cold" as it was called?

Just sayin'

km

Anonymous said...

I just went to nofakenews.net and as I suspected the owner is a Chiropractor. While I place very little trust in the medical profession I place even less trust in Chiropractors.

km

Anonymous said...

apply critical thinking skills to the news coming out about covid19 and you will sense that something is different about this "pandemic".

no doubt it is serious for those with underlying health conditions, but then, disease in general is serious for those folks.

the last numbers I saw were 5,000 deaths from covid19, and 85,000 from the seasonal flu....why is there no panic about the flu?

oh yeah, it's a new virus and no one has immunity from it.....well, that's how it works, we don't have immunity from anything until we catch it, from then on our bodies develop immunity....so the whole "immunity" thing is just a red herring to divert your attention from truth and cause panic among the population.

and then there is the conflict of interest among Dr. Birx and Dr. Fauci...look into their backgrounds and at how their stories have changed since January...

add to this the resistance to the malaria drug that has shown to be quite effective against this new illness, while hoping for a patented treatment will come onstage....and the governors that prohibited Drs in their states from prescribing it, only to be caught hoarding it ....

I'm not one to believe conspiracy theories, but a little critical thinking leads me to believe that something is rotten in Denmark.....

nck said...

True Dennis.

Just when I read your article the Shofar was blown in front of my house to announce the pending sacrifice and the angel of death for passover. It sent shivers through my spine and I started sweating and breathing heavily.

Only when I dared to investigate and peeked out of the window, I noticed this 4 year old kid playing with a plastic tube signaling his little friends whose mommas practiced social distancing.

I should go out more.

But that would cost me lot of fines issued by the local guvment.

Nck

nck said...

Yesterday while playing in the garden I suddenly was not able to breathe anymore. I thought I was dying and prayed to George Soros and Bill Gates to provide relief from their vaults.

Then my wife handed me my light hay fever pills from the supermarket and all was well.

True story...... kinda.

Nck

Anonymous said...

The churches of god have always been into Conspiracy Theories. Nothing new. So why do we entertain these? Because we don't trust our institutions.

For example, the media is suppose to keep the government in check. Instead we have what the father of modern propaganda, Edward Bernays would call, social engineering. We learned how the public is exploited for the benefit of governments and corporations.

CNN is a good example. There was a hurricane some years back and we see Anderson Cooper standing in a ditch in what appears to be high water. Snoops that everyone trusts for some reason really puts a twist on this. Tell me, do you buy their logic?
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/anderson-cooper-hurricane/

The U.S. government and Chemtrails. People say the government is behind weather modifications for climate change. Well guess what? They are.
https://newspunch.com/cia-finally-come-clean-about-chemtrails-on-their-website/

So to keep this brief let's examine another:

1994

"With a technique called ‘gene tracking’, Dr. Garth Nicolson at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, TX discovers that many returning Desert Storm veterans are infected with an altered strain of Mycoplasmaincognitus, a microbe commonly used in the production of biological weapons. Incorporated into its molecular structure is 40 percent of the HIV protein coat, indicating that it had been man-made."

https://www.whiteoutpress.com/secret-government-experiments-on-the-american-people/

So as you can see, people have a reason to suspect their government. This is why we have conspiracy theories, which we are also told by government 'authorities', that we shouldn't fall for them. From 911 to more modern times, when ever we run into these we need to think objectively. When I see that the American government does the opposite of what logic dictates I start to question "who benefits."

If you don't know who Edward Bernays is watch this so you can understand the concept just presented to you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Q-3qwEDyPM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odX8cDe1w6s

Tonto said...

The future is always scary, for destiny prescribes these only guarantees, "Old Age, Disease and Death".

Thus people try to find an order and want some degree of control or knowledge about the future.

When one believes there is a cabal of people who have control over things, or are manipulating events to the Nth degree, by having the "secret inside awareness" of these things can also provide a sense of control.

Here is the truth though, and it is perhaps more scary than any conspiracy theory. There is actually NO ONE in absolute control, other than the "invisible hand of the marketplace" and there is not someone waiting by the proverbial "button" with "control".

No, not the President, not the Federal Reserve, not the illuminati, or the Bilderbergers , or the Trilateral or the DEMS/REPS etc. Surely there is some power with money and there are societal trends, but not the massive secretive control that some imagine.

No, the ultimate "ruler" of mankind , all of us, is "VANITY, LUST and GREED". These "powers that be" have always existed.

Liam Grabarkewitz said...

People never know what's going to happen next. But because they have routines, they make predictions about what is probable and this provides comfort. The pandemic has decimated that.

To have either a prophetic guru in control, like some in the COGs, or to have the idea that there is some kind of global conspiracy in control, gives people the comfort of routine. Even if that routine and habit is spiritual or even physical slavery.

Anonymous said...



Facts!

https://newspunch.com/trump-discusses-coronavirus-preparation-february-sotu-pelosi-tore-it-up/

DennisCDiehl said...

In my experience in my profession some chiropractors and therapeutic massage therapists easily stray outside the lines into woo woo. So do many clergy I know

Miller Jones/Lonnie C Hendrix said...

The Trump Administration's new strategy: Predict 100-200,000 deaths, and then crow about the "success" when it turns out to be 75,000 & acknowledge the economic catastrophe, but blame it on the pandemic, Chinese and Democrats - It's just another attempt to bring down Trump!

WHAT ABOUT THE TRUTH said...

I think all the conspiracy theories started with Paul's mystery and ink on scrolls.

I live in an area now where something flashed across the sky back in the 60's and landed in the woods. The locals who made it to the scene first were convinced it was of alien origin. In the middle of the dark night the military quickly arrived and all evidence was removed before the light of day came.

Being content to seeing through a glass darkly is a lost trait for many in the COGs. Reacting to events as they come has become a boring exercise for many leaders and ministers and members.

I once had to call the top ranking minister who he along with his fellow ministers and their leader were talking incessantly in sermonetes and sermons about some crazy hybrid two part prophetic scenario that was hard to listen to. When the minister couldn't answer my question as to how a sequential prophecy could be taken apart and added into another prophecy for a conclusion that made no sense, his answer was, "that is official doctrine".

The official government response to what crashed into a wood lot on a dark night many years ago, was that it was a military satellite.

Mysteries, conspiracies or real or imagined happenings mostly come to be understood in time, whether it is in our lifetimes or in future generations.

I have to go, my neighbor found a large footprint in the woods and he wants me to join him to find Bigfoot.

nck said...

WATT

Is that your neighbor at 667?

Nck

WHAT ABOUT THE TRUTH said...



I just went to nofakenews.net and as I suspected the owner is a Chiropractor. While I place very little trust in the medical profession I place even less trust in Chiropractors.

km

I swore off chiropractors for many years and could tell you many long and almost unbelievable stories of their ways of practice.

Being just about buckled over in pain last year for many weeks, a business acquaintance recommended I see his chiropractor. After politely refusing his offer, he guaranteed she would fix my back in one session. I went and this lady worked on my back for one hour. When I asked her how many times I would have to come back, she said you won't have to come back and that will be 30 dollars for today.

I think I found the pearl of great price concerning chiropractors.

PS

Km, I think I met you back in the day if you were attending in Appalachia.

Byker Bob said...

The map to the right with the little green flashing diodes is like totally blowing up, especially for the east, southeast, and parts of the midwest. Hopefully this article, posted by Dennis, is read, understood, and will help people to get on the correct team, although I'm pretty sure that some will dismiss it as having been carefully scripted by the media, or the New World Order.

The disease is real. People are dying, even the doctors who are treating it, along with first responders, and it is something tangible for which people can be tested. There is much uncertainty because we are still in the early stages of gathering data. Therefore, some tend to co-opt and use the partial information to support their questionable agendas, or to engage in finger-pointing. Each day, I have been dividing the number of global deaths by the number of known cases. I usually check Banned first, so have not done that as yet this morning, but yesterday the percentage of deaths stood at 5.4%. Even that figure is skewed because there are so many unknown infections, as testing is not universal.

We're not quite at the point where we "pick up the pieces." We have not even reached the point of bottoming out. Supposedly that will occur within the next few weeks. There are a lot of talking heads out there who are becoming part of a potentially greater problem, because they are whipping up their followers and exploiting their fears at a time when we need calm, and rational behavior. Damage control does not just include protective measures against contracting the virus. It also involves restraining those who would cause a wide variety of additional damage, as they react. If that happens, it is guaranteed that there will be greater suppression of our rights for the common good.

If we look at some of the responses we are seeing within the ACOGs, it is disturbing to see calls for civil disobedience which could result in greater infection. Some of the extreme ACOG leaders will have qualified themselves both ethically and morally as mass murderers by virtue of their refusal to comply with the social distancing mandated by their state authorities. Those who make their churches into right wing activists may become guilty of far worse than that.

Safest course for all of us is to treat the disease as if it is real even if you don't believe it. Keep a cool head. Don't add to the problem. There will be plenty of time for second guessing the authorities after the fact once the tide is turned. It'd be very nice indeed if none of us in the Banned community, or our families contracts the virus, or if there are cases, that they would be mild. Taking precautions helps stack the odds in our favor. If anyone tells you different (including your minister) it is your option and right to make such decisions for yourself! Make them good ones!

BB

Anonymous said...

April 5, 2020 at 10:11 AM

Let me know if you find 'Bigfoot'.
Its in the bible.

-cog member

NO2HWA said...

BB

The site is blowing-up because of the article about Dave Pack meeting yesterday for church. It has hot Ohio regional Facebook pages and other sites. There is a network of exRCG folk spreading it to the world. The Akron Beacon Journal has also been contacted

NO2HWA said...

That story has already had close to 15,000 hits. Betwen 6-9:00 pm PST last night the article got 7,000 hits and it has been burning up ever since.

Byker Bob said...

Oh, that is so awesome, Gary! Hopefully, Pack will respond under pressure in a similar fashion to what happened with Jerry Weston.

While some of the false prophets are working overtime to exploit the plague for their own purposes, Banned is actually saving lives!

Good on ya!

BB

NO2HWA said...

Now over 16,000 hits

WHAT ABOUT THE TRUTH said...



WATT

Is that your neighbor at 667?

Nck

Nck you are too smart. Thanks for not revealing the real number of my neighbor.

Now you need to get back to work, I consider you an essential business.

Anonymous said...

WATT, I attended the Clarksburg WV congregation of the WCG.

Feel free to email me at:

Kevinmcmillen64@gmail.com

km

Byker Bob said...

The beauty of this is that the public is already galvanized against the extremists who have insisted on continuing what are known to be "superspreader" events, ie their normal church services. It doesn't only affect the church members, it is also potentially endangering to all of their "worldly" contacts. Even though this attracts attention to himself and RCG, it is of a nature that I seriously doubt Dave Pack will have any better luck at spinning in his favor than did Bill Cosby when confronted with MeToo. In both cases, the public sees an evil behavior pattern, and is not interested in hearing the rationale behind it. Pack's deliberate sabbath services and Passover are going to come off looking like a Jim Jones event.

It should also provide current RCG members with a very valid reason for leaving, as if they didn't already have a superabundance.

BB

RSK said...

Currently watching my wife the medical professional battle what your idiot emailer called "a common cold".

Go fuck yourself.

Anonymous said...

There are dozens of conspiracies mentioned in the Bible. For instance, in Jeremiah 40.13 "..don't you know that Baalis the king of the Ammonites has sent Ismael son of Nethaniah to take your life. But Gedaliah son of Ahikam did not believe him." The conspiracy proved true and cost the king his life. Satan conspired against humanity in the garden of Eden. Both Saul and Absalom conspired against David. Korah conspired against Moses. Mordecai exposed the plot against the king in the book of Esther. Not forgetting the plots against Paul's and Christ's life.

That the existence of conspiracies is mocked by people with an agenda, is to be expected.

Anonymous said...

That the existence of conspiracies is mocked by people with an agenda, is to be expected.

Yes. But, on the other hand, if you think you know about one of these conspiracies, it almost certainly is not an actual conspiracy. The real conspirators are much more powerful and subtle than you know, and are well able to hide themselves from you.

Anonymous said...

RSK, hope all goes well with your wife!

km