There's just too much semantic bullshit in this thread to disentangle whilst also doing everything that I'm supposed to be doing at work. Noel, you're conflating various different things in your responses to me: the validity of 'conspiracy theories' understood as a genre; the validity of political 'conspiracy' understood as an explanation for politico-historical phenomenon; the degree to which political conspiracy explains politico-historical phenomenon; the relationship between conspiracy theories (narrative genre) and conspiracies (actual 'fact')... etc.
Yes, conspiracies have happened in the past and will in the future. Big fucking deal. As your 'selective' quotation (er, that's what quoting is, right?) from Wikipedia shows, everything is a conspiracy from the right angle. "We are all, in fact, Conspiracy Theorists." Indeed. Everyone is trying to present a front at almost all times. You're probably a plant from the group who really controls the world, trying to sow anti-CIA counterintelligence. Can't be proved or disproved, just what I choose to believe, just like you choose to believe that US intelligence was involved in 9/11.
And why do people believe in 'conspiracy theories'? Some of them are pretty outlandish, like the Russian neo-Nazi Pamyat's recent (ish) claim that Zionists and Freemasons were behind the Russian revolutions and the resulting democide. There are two conspiracies in that claim: the actual conspiracy that involved state sponsored mass murder (well documented), and the spurious, offensive and speculative notion that Zionists and Freemasons were responsible. Well, it's possible that they were, but were they? Do you think it fulfills a psychological function for Russian neo-Nazis to blame their country's misfortunes on a secreat cabal of Jews and fancy-dress-fetishists?
Why do conspiracy theories exist? They help to plug gaps in peoples' understanding of the world. Eveyone likes a story. You've said that this is ludicrous and offensive even, but it seems pretty mundane and obvious to me. How come the buildings fell straight down, not to the side like you'd expect? Simple, they were rigged with explosives (yeah, but why? doesn't matter, obv). How come the most powerful country in the world got caught out? Simple, it didn't. How come the US went to war with Saddam when they'd been his ally not long previously? Conspiracy. How come the US can overthrow Saddam in a week but can't turn the leccy on? Conspiracy. Everywhere you look, there's a potential conspiracy. And why limit it to just macro scale events? No bus this morning? Blame the conspiracy. you can fill this knowledge gap easily. Just make it up. Does it sound plausible? Then it's probably true. At least, it can't be dismissed.
Narratives are very powerful, viral even (bleugh -- horibble term now). The US is discovering just how powerful in the GWOT, which is in many ways a competition of narratives. It's not what happened that counts, but what people believe happened. (Thank fuck AQ are worse at this than we are. Though AQ could be a clever CIA ruse, of course).
I've lost count of the number of people who've explained to me exactly why it was the Jews or the Americans who were responsible for 9/11. Very few of them had anything approaching a cursory familiarity with the events of the day, the history, engineering, terrorist organisations, the ME, etc, etc, etc. They were convinced that they were right and nothing was going to disabuse them of that notion, because counter-evidence is simply evidence of the conspiracy and therefore not counter-evidence at all. Like the 'surge': Iraq going badly -- it's what they wanted; Iraq going well -- it's also what they wanted!
And yes, some people believe in conspiracies because they have some basis in fact, in that people 'conspire' all the time. And yes, most people believe that conspiracy theories are wacky bullshit because that's what they are, most of the time. To appreciate this properly, one merely has to mentally list conspiracy theories.
And was there a 9/11 conspiracy? I.e., was there US governmental involvement? I think it's pretty clear that there wasn't because of all the reasons I've listed. It's not simply that 'conspiracy theories' are unthinkable, but that most are spurious. There's a film where someone dies and gets to heaven, meets St Peter at the gate and asks "so what was the true religion?" "Moromonism" (or whatever). "What?!" the dude says, "I was sure it was Judaism." "Nope," says St Peter. "Down you go!"
A corporation profiting from the Iraq was doesn't mean that 9/11 was an 'inside job'. But if it was, that would mean that the corporation would have to (at the least) have been able to predict the Iraq War from 9/11. And that would mean not only the support of whatever organisation that commited it (and why?), but also the support of the upper eschelons of the US government, interagency cooperation and the rest. There's a saying "Amateurs talk strategy; professionals talk logistics." And blah, blah, blah, but it's a good point. I'm not saying that there was no 'conspiracy' (pejorative sense) because it's unthinkable (to an ideologue like me, natch), but because it's not very plausible and nothing you've said has made it seem more so.
vimothy on this thread you;re starting to appear thick and obtuse. thats more mr teas role. leave him to it.
Hey man I have fans to disappoint too.