14 March 2010

so, how did u performed today?

there are cameras all over the place! institutions, public transports, restaurants, shops, streets... so, we are living in the biggest performance ever! ingenious costumes, exquisite attitude and personal approach, everything inspired by the greatest model ever, media!
please, enjoy your performance and do your best!

list of some conspiracy theories

1 New World Order- Federal Reserve System
2 False flag operations
3 Wars
4 Coups d'état
5 Official Conspiracy Theories
6 Assassinations- Clinton Body Count
7 Technology and weapons-1 Suppression of technologies
-2 Development of weapons technology
-3 Weapons testing
-4 Surveillance, espionage and intelligence agencies
8 Media- DTV Transition
9 Medicine-1 Drug legalization
-2 Diet
-3 Creation of diseases
-4 Water fluoridation
-5 Traditional, Natural and Alternative medicines
-6 Midwifery
10 Peak Oil
11 Secret societies
12 Ethnicity and race-1 Armenian International Conspiracy
-2 Jewish world domination
-3 Arab-Israeli relations
-4 "Babylon" and racist oppression
-5 Eurabia
-6 Arab-fascist axis
13 Paranormal Activity-1 Evil aliens
-2 Extraterrestrials
14 Religion-1 Apocalyptic prophecies
-2 Bible conspiracy theory
-3 Catholicism a veiled continuation of Babylonian paganism
15 Miscellaneous
Conspiracy theory is a term that originally was a neutral descriptor for any claim of civil, criminal or political conspiracy. However, it has become largely pejorative and used almost exclusively to refer to any fringe theory which explains a historical or current event as the result of a secret plot by conspirators.
Conspiracy theories are viewed with skepticism by the scientific community and academia, and often ridiculed by pundits, because they are rarely supported by any convincing evidence and contrast with institutional analysis, which focuses on people's collective behavior in publicly known institutions, as recorded in scholarly material and mainstream media reports, to explain historical or current events, rather than speculate on the motives and actions of secretive coalitions of individuals.
The term is therefore often used dismissively in an attempt to characterize a belief as outlandishly false and held by a person judged to be a crank or a group confined to the lunatic fringe. Such characterization is often the subject of dispute due to its possible unfairness and inaccuracy.
In the United States of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, conspiracy theories have become commonplace in mass media. This has contributed to conspiracism emerging as a cultural phenomenon and the possible replacement of democracy by conspiracy as the dominant paradigm of political action in the public mind. According to anthropologists Todd Sanders and Harry G. West, "evidence suggests that a broad cross section of Americans today…gives credence to at least some conspiracy theories."