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-
- Date: Sat Jul 16 1994 13:54:58
- From: Rick Moen
- To: Chris Mangus
- Subj: Re: Skeptibunker's creed.
- UFO -------------------------------
-
- Here's an article I wrote about a kinda-sorta hoax that I carried out
- last year on Compu$erve (although nothing I said was incorrect, and I
- never actually mislead anyone). Some might enjoy it:
-
- IT'S ALL A PLOT
- by Rick Moen
-
- One of the more diverting places on CompuServe (the international data
- service) is the Paranormal Issues section. Just type "GO
- ISSUES", pick section #10 (Paranormal Issues), and you're there,
- looking at hundreds of public messages on a motley collection of topics.
- (Cue Rod Serling voice, here.) You have now entered a dimension of weird
- claims and bizarre responses. You have entered. . . The Conspiracy Zone.
-
- Now, one would think that, in a fringe-science forum, conspiracy
- theorising would mostly revolve around the Roswell/Secorro/Corona 1947
- crashed-saucer claims. Indeed, much of it does, but, possibly because of
- an emphasis on political issues elsewhere in this forum, a curious
- obsession with JFK assassination theories not only regularly takes over
- the message section, but also -- to my utter fascination -- spills
- over into Roswell discussions. What we're talking about here are
- theories even wilder than gonzo UFOlogist Bill Cooper's assertion that
- JFK's driver had turned around and shot him: We're talking _weird_.
-
- Now, I was present, off and on, as Mr. Token Skeptic ("Toke",
- for short), and tended to annoy many of the regulars -- who have us
- skeptics all figured out -- by being reasonable and pleasant. (They
- hate it when you do that.) As the theories got progressively wilder, a
- sudden thought occurred to me, and I mentioned it: All sufficiently
- large-scale conspiracy theories are interchangeable: If you think big,
- you can overcome absolutely any problem of evidence, by simply inventing
- a larger conspiracy: Absence of evidence proves how effective They are
- at concealing it. Contrary evidence shows that They are spreading
- disinformation. Anyone contradicting you is obviously one of Them.
-
- The response? I might as well have tried to make a splash in day-old
- concrete. Nobody noticed a word of the foregoing. So, I decided to make
- my point in a way that _would_ get attention:
-
- The JFK conspiracy messages I'd seen on Paranormal Issues, I said, were
- interesting, but there was an element curiously missing -- the NSA. The
- National Security Agency, a Federal institution many times larger than
- the CIA, is charged with all U.S. government communications security and
- signals intelligence, and is heavily interconnected with the business of
- other intelligence agencies. Yet, none of the theorists on "Issues" had
- mentioned it at all. Isn't that odd, I asked.
-
- I remarked that I could think of only three alternative explanations for
- this strange omission:
-
- 1. NSA was so very good at covering up its involvement in the JFK affair
- that, even though our resident theorists had sniffed out nefarious
- skullduggery in the FBI, CIA, Secret Service, etc., NSA had eluded
- them -- in spite of NSA's mammoth size and importance. This I said
- sounded unlikely.
-
- 2. NSA had its hands so clean, and had so little connection with or
- knowledge of the conspiracy efforts of other Feds -- again, in spite of
- its size and involvement with other agencies -- that there was nothing
- for our intrepid conspiracy-finders to uncover. Once more, I said this
- wasn't too plausible.
-
- 3. The only reason our theorists omitted NSA is that they actually knew
- next to nothing about intelligence affairs, and so, like most Americans,
- didn't even think of the NSA because they knew little about it. This
- would of course call into question what business they had commenting on
- intelligence matters in the first place.
-
- At this point, I sat back to watch. Wouldn't the forum regulars smell a
- skeptical rat? I rather expected they would. Toke was having some
- pretty obvious fun with them, having, after all, teased them a little
- in the past.
-
- Well, no, that's not quite what happened. Instead, several of the
- regulars took the concept and ran with it -- popping up newer, grander
- conspiracy theories that now included a role for the NSA. Now, I got my
- chance to underline dramatically the point I'd tried to make earlier:
- The conspiracy buffs had just dealt with an evidential obstacle
- _by expanding their theories_. This, I explained, was the trait that made
- large-scale conspiracy theories worthless -- and interchangeable: If
- there were evidence that proved them wrong, the theorists would never
- see that as long as they continued to finesse away all problems via
- newer and bigger plots.
-
- I didn't expect to be thanked for this insight, but wasn't quite
- prepared for the howls and imprecations that ensued: Mean Toke. Bad
- Toke. You fooled us! Oh, the horror, and so on. It went downhill from
- there: Within the week, word was out that this Moen fellow told
- _deliberate lies_ in order to sow _disinformation_ among honest,
- solid-citizen conspiracy buffs. He's one of those rotten shifty-
- eyed skeptic types, probably on the government payroll and definitely
- one of Them. Never mind whether what I said _made sense_. What was
- important was whether I could be personally trusted, after committing
- the crime of tricking people -- and, worse, admitting it. (That said
- people had been come out looking foolish in public was, of course, mere
- coincidence.)
-
- Anyhow, I wanted to welcome you, the reader, to The Conspiracy. The pay
- isn't great, and we have troubles keeping our story straight, but it's
- good to be on the side of the heavy guns, isn't it?
-
- Be sure not to tell anyone, though.
-
- - end -
-
-