Eps 1: A good conspiracy is a warm gun. is that so?

A good conspiracy is a warm gun. is that so?

Host image: StyleGAN neural net
Content creation: GPT-3.5,

Host

Lisa Reed

Lisa Reed

Podcast Content
Greene is one of the best-known congressional candidates to follow the groundless QAnon movement, a series of conspiracy theories that suggest without evidence that Donald Trump was elected to the White House to combat a vast sex trafficking conspiracy run by a cabal of top Democrats and government officials. Greene received donations from the Koch brothers political action committee, the political action committee of the National Association for Gun Rights, a conservative gun lobby.
Instead of being shunned, Marjorie Taylor Greene, a businesswoman and conservative activist from Georgia, was welcomed by an important and powerful group of fellow Republicans in Congress who expressed support for her and some have opened their wallets. Some leading Republican congressmen have backed her opponent. Other leading Republicans, including Donald Trump and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, have welcomed her presence in the GOP movement and in American politics.
Tom DeWeese, one of the first representatives of radical right, was not the first to attack the United Nations Agenda 21 plan, beginning with its adoption at the Earth Summit in Brazil in 1992. Keyes opposed Agenda 21 in a blog post in 2011, accusing the government of allowing the UN to take over American treasures by declaring them a World Heritage Site. When Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Republican candidate for the 14th Congressional District of Georgia, gave a victory speech to defend against "hatred" in America and urging House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to do so, some felt an opening.
That year, she described the UN plan as part of a massive power grab. In the early 1960's the John Birch Society attacked the United Nations as a space for socialists, communists and insiders who wanted to take over America.
Her dream job was her loyal secretary Freda Kelly, who she held until the Beatles disbanded eleven years later. She added that the United Nations is a front for what is really happening in our lives, supported by groups of international bankers. Agenda 21, the 1992 UN Sustainable Development Plan signed by the leaders of 178 of the world's 196 countries, did not have the binding power to enforce action.
She cited three Instagram accounts as the primary source of information, one of which shared conspiracy theories about QAnon and Pizzagate. He said Greene has since distanced himself from the group, but he still supports it through social media and a number of local gun groups, including the so-called Georgia Martyrs.
One suggested that the US government would act on behalf of Israel to prevent King of Pop from releasing a song sympathetic to the Palestinian people. Another theory was that the Beatles prophesied race war, happiness, a warm weapon, the call to carry weapons, and an imminent revolution.
Yet one of rock music's most persistent conspiracy theories rests on what believers see as clues left by surviving members of the Beatles. In fact, few bands are as well documented as The Beatles, and some of the most persistent and fantastical conspiracy theories about them remain. The most famous theory is the theory "Paul is dead", which suggests that Paul died in 1966 in his Aston Martin and was replaced by someone who looks and embodies exactly like William Campbell.
In one of the last twitch-outs of Beatlemania, director Ryan White managed to tell the story how the Beatles had never heard of their faithful secretary Freda Kelly. Sir George Martin has shaped the band's songs in a way that, when appreciated, is impossible to forget. At the same time, authors like Gerald Posner and Vincent Bugliosi have reclaimed history to refute important conspiracy theories.
Since the Sandy Hook shooting, a small group of people have offered a bevy of conspiracy theories about mass shootings. I will use this conversation as an opportunity to debunk three of the Beatles "great conspiracy theories. Before we turn to any theory, a following of more than one was seriously offered.
The first to spread the Sharpiegate conspiracy was about Charlie Kirk, a youth group of students, and Trump. Not surprisingly, the gun-control lobby, known as the National Rifle Association , overwhelmingly supports sensible gun control measures and is part of a Bilderberg conspiracy of unknown proportions, including one by die-hard Republican Frank Luntz.
This theory is supported by a song whose copyright date comes from a Dylan record: "Blowin in the Wind. Sounds like it could be The Beatles, but the debut album of Canadian prog rock band Klaatus has given conspiracy theorists plenty of reasons to believe otherwise.
The song was recorded on October 8, 1968 and completed in one session . One of the dozens of songs the Beatles wrote in India, "Tired," describes Lennon's fragile state of mind. It was recorded in the same session as "White Album" and continues the story of the bungalow bill.
"I am so tired" is a song by English rock band The Beatles from their double album The Beatles in 1968 also known as The White Album. The theme of insomnia is supplemented by the song "Sleeping With Revolver" from the album.
The film gave the impression that First Lady Jackie Kennedy that day was the only person who had not planned to assassinate the president on Dealey Plaza. This led to a conspiracy theory that Elvis's death was a hoax and that the FBI protected him from a group of fraudsters called Fraternity. One long-standing conspiracy theory is that the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program was a secret weather control device or worse - a federal-funded research project in Alaska.