While this list features more stories that claim to be true than fringe theories, the @ConspiracyFeedIG account does says that it’s dedicated to sharing “mind-blowing theories,” so we wanted to delve deeper into some of those theories right here.
We reached out to Danielle Mercy, host of The Rabbit Hole Podcast, to find out more about conspiracy theories and where they come from. “Typically, conspiracy theories come from inconsistent stories,” the host says. “When the evidence is suggesting one thing, while the conclusion that is being published says another.”
So should we be taking conspiracy theories seriously? “It is important to look at all the facts of the theory before you decide if you believe it,” Danielle noted. “Not every conspiracy theory is true, but a lot of them are.”
“There have been many theories proven true. It is up to each person if they take a theory seriously or not,” she continued. “I think it depends on the amount of research that the person has put into the theory.”
We also asked Danielle about the theories that she's convinced are true. “I believe a lot of theories are true. The JFK assassination, 9/11, and the moon landing to name a few,” she told Bored Panda.
“I research conspiracy theories for a living, so I have found evidence to disprove the narrative that has been told to the public on each of these theories,” the host revealed. “Not just one or two things, I have found more evidence to disprove the narrative than to prove it.”
So will we ever be able to prove that these conspiracy theories are valid? “I think that individuals are proving that they are true, but the mainstream calls these people conspiracy theorists,” Danielle shared. “They label people like this to discredit them and the work they have done.”
“There are several cases that were conspiracy theories until the government released the information,” the host pointed out. “The Gulf of Tonkin Incident is one that was a theory until years later when the government released that the ship wasn’t actually under attack. However, I do not believe they will release information on all the theories. We probably won’t get answers on most of them.”
If you’re interested in finding out more information about certain conspiracy theories, Danielle says her podcast is a great place to start. “I go over all the angles associated with the theory,” she explained. “But I always encourage more research into each theory.”
“Unfortunately, when it comes to a conspiracy theory, you can’t trust any mainstream media source,” she added. “Unless you want to debunk the theory. The mainstream is trying to push the narrative that they created.”
“To research further, you must go to the blogs, the podcasts, the rumble videos, that don’t have huge corporate oversight to get the information,” Danielle shared. “And even if you do that, you must compare the information you are finding. Follow money trails. Researching conspiracy theories isn’t for the weak. You have to dig to get the information.”
Finally, Danielle added that, “It’s okay to just be curious about conspiracy theories. You don’t have to believe them to research them. When I started, it wasn’t because I was a conspiracy theorist, I was genuinely curious about the theories. In doing more research, I find that I believe a lot more theories, but that wasn’t why I started. And not any one source will give you all the information. So dig!”
We were also able to get in touch with Greg Taylor, founder of Daily Grail, to hear his perspective on this topic. "Conspiracy theories have no doubt existed across the world, and throughout human history - as a social creature, we have in-groups and out-groups that always have imbalances of power, as well as strange/bad things that happen to us that people want to explain, or at least blame someone for," he told Bored Panda.
"As such, people have always suggested that other people are doing bad things in secret. Sometimes they have evidence for what is an actual conspiracy - but a lot of the time they arise purely out of speculation and distrust, or bigotry, with a goal of making sense of the strange/bad thing, and finding a scapegoat for it," Greg explained. "That is why conspiracy theories quite often become more popular during difficult or unsettled times."
"As famed writer Alan Moore once noted, 'The main thing that I learned about conspiracy theory, is that conspiracy theorists believe in a conspiracy because that is more comforting. The truth of the world is that it is actually chaotic. The truth is that it is not The Illuminati, or The Jewish Banking Conspiracy, or the Gray Alien Theory. The truth is far more frightening - nobody is in control. The world is rudderless,'" Greg shared.
He also says that conspiracy theories should be taken seriously in two different ways. "Firstly, if there is solid evidence behind a conspiracy theory, then there would be an actual need to address the conspiracy that is happening. But secondly, spurious conspiracy theories have, historically, led to some very awful things happening to groups of people who became the scapegoats of a conspiracy theory," Greg explained. "For example, the 'Protocols of the Elders of Zion' contributed to awful persecutions of Jewish people in the 20th century... literal genocide."
So is Greg convinced of any of these theories? "I try not to be 'believe' in any conspiracy theory, but I am willing to listen to evidence and decide if it should at least be entertained as a possibility," he shared. "By their very nature, I think unless they can be undeniably proven to be a conspiracy (and therefore no longer a 'conspiracy theory'), then they are always going to sit on a spectrum of plausibility. As author Robert Anton Wilson once put it, 'I don't believe anything, but I have many suspicions.'"






















