Whenever you see the mainstream media slapping something with the “conspiracy theory” label, you can bet your bottom dollar that what they are really trying to do is discredit any sort of narrative that is outside of the propaganda they are pushing for the radical left. No one wants to be considered a loony who believes wacky things, right?
However, some of these “conspiracy theories” have actually turned out to be true. Quite a few to be honest. And because of that, the media has been caught spewing lies on many occasions.
It seems people have started to wake up. No longer are they blindly accepting what the media is pushing. They know now that it’s the narrative that their progressive owners want pushed that comes out of the mouths of the talking heads.
Americans now want transparency from news outlets. They are applying pressure through the power of switching the channel and its working. Many networks have actually come out and admitted that some of these “theories” were true. Here’s a few examples.
1 — The Lab Leak Theory
When the COVID-19 pandemic broke out all across the planet and caused widespread chaos, which opened up an opportunity for progressives to seize more power from the people and try to control them, many theories popped up to explain the origin of the illness.
One of those was the lab leak theory. For years now, we were told this was “disinformation” and that it wasn’t true. However, this attempt at censorship was pushed by individuals in prominent positions to discredit the idea and make those who were proponents of it look like fools.
But the truth has finally come out. The CIA has publicly admitted that it is more than not the lab leak theory is the correct origin story for COVID.
The CIA has shifted its stance about the origin of the virus that causes Covid-19, NBC News reported on Saturday. The intelligence agency now believes that the coronavirus escaped from a Chinese lab, a shift from its previous stance, in which it did not take a position.
“CIA assesses with low confidence that a research-related origin of the COVID-19 pandemic is more likely than a natural origin based on the available body of reporting,” a CIA spokesperson said in a statement to NBC News.
2 — MKUltra
Back in the day, if you dared to confess you were a believer in the MKUltra program carried out by our intelligence apparatus decades ago, you’d quickly become a candidate for a white rubber room and a nice, new snug-fitting jacket. But we now have access to hundreds of documents from our government proving the CIA really did operate a mind control program.
Newly compiled records are spilling the beans on one of the CIA’s most notorious and shadowy programs: MKUltra, a wild attempt to develop mind control techniques through drugs, hypnosis, and psychological manipulation.
The collection was published by the Digital National Security Archive of The George Washington University in December 2024, detailing more than 1,200 documents on the CIA’s foray into behavioral and mind control experiments from 1953 until the 1970s. Much of the information comes from records gathered by John Marks, a former State Department official who initiated the first Freedom of Information Act requests on the topic and authored the 1979 book The Search for the Manchurian Candidate.
We’re actually lucky these documents still exist because the director of the CIA ordered all the records that are connected to the MKUltra program be destroyed.
In 1973, the director of the CIA, Richard Helms, ordered that all documents related to MKUltra be destroyed. However, a cache documents was discovered following a freedom of information request in 1977, which led to Senate hearings. MKUltra was declassified in 2001.
3 — Operation Paperclip
Along the same lines as MKUltra, Operation Paperclip is another “conspiracy theory” that turned out to be 100 percent real. The program involved the United States shipping hundreds of Nazi scientists from Germany into our country following the end of World War II.
The purpose of Operation Paperclip was to enlist the help of those scientists “to help develop America’s arsenal of rockets and other biological and chemical weapons.”
As World War II was entering its final stages, American and British organizations teamed up to scour occupied Germany for as much military, scientific and technological development research as they could uncover.
Trailing behind Allied combat troops, groups such as the Combined Intelligence Objectives Subcommittee (CIOS) began confiscating war-related documents and materials and interrogating scientists as German research facilities were seized by Allied forces. One enlightening discovery—recovered from a toilet at Bonn University—was the Osenberg List: a catalogue of scientists and engineers that had been put to work for the Third Reich.
In a covert affair originally dubbed Operation Overcast but later renamed Operation Paperclip, roughly 1,600 of these German scientists (along with their families) were brought to the United States to work on America’s behalf during the Cold War. The program was run by the newly-formed Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA), whose goal was to harness German intellectual resources to help develop America’s arsenal of rockets and other biological and chemical weapons, and to ensure such coveted information did not fall into the hands of the Soviet Union.
4 — The Fluoride In Drinking Water Is Bad For Us
Authorities for many years have absolutely insisted that lacing drinking water with fluoride was actually good for us and healthy. After all, it helped reduce cavities and dental issues, so hey, why not?
However, a federal judge recently issued a ruling that says there is actual evidence to support the belief that fluoride in our drinking water could negatively impact the intellectual development of children. CNN says:
A federal judge has ordered the US Environmental Protection Agency to further regulate fluoride in drinking water because high levels could pose a risk to the intellectual development of children. US District Judge Edward Chen cautioned that it’s not certain that the amount of fluoride typically added to water is causing lower IQ in kids, but he concluded that mounting research points to an unreasonable risk that it could be. He ordered the EPA to take steps to lower that risk, but didn’t say what those measures should be.
There are plenty more examples, but I think you get the point. Just because you think outside the box doesn’t mean what you’re saying isn’t true.
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