![]() Incidents such as the 1955 bombing of the Kashmir Princess, the 1985 Arrow Air Flight 1285 crash, the 1986 Mozambican Tupolev Tu-134 crash, the 1987 Helderberg Disaster, the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 and the 1994 Mull of Kintyre helicopter crash as well as various aircraft technologies and alleged sightings, have all spawned theories of foul play which deviate from official verdicts. Numerous conspiracy theories pertain to air travel and aircraft. However, the current scientific consensus holds that most conspiracy theorists are not pathological, precisely because their beliefs ultimately rely on cognitive tendencies that are neurologically hardwired in the human species and probably have deep evolutionary origins, including natural inclinations towards anxiety and agent detection. Psychologists sometimes attribute belief in conspiracy theories and finding a conspiracy where there is none to a number of psychopathological conditions such as paranoia, schizotypy, narcissism, and insecure attachment, or to a form of cognitive bias called " illusory pattern perception". However, they are often discredited a priori due to the cumbersome and improbable nature of many of them. In principle, conspiracy theories are not always false by default and their validity depends on evidence just as in any theory. Conspiracy theories usually deny consensus or cannot be proven using the historical or scientific method, and are not to be confused with research concerning verified conspiracies such as Germany's pretense for invading Poland in World War II. Many conspiracy theories relate to supposed clandestine government plans and elaborate murder plots. ![]() This is a list of conspiracy theories that are notable. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. Another 'airplane' one he told me, which I haven't heard recently, is that the government secretly made all commercial airplanes carry atomic bombs, so in the event of WW3 we already had a bomber fleet in the air which could be diverted to bomb targets.This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. ![]() He said that it wasn't new, when he was a boy in the 1930s people said that the government put the drugs in the water supply. Incidentally the 'contrails' one I first heard in the 1960s when my Dad told me that some people believed it. And yes, although we're mocking it it isn't so funny any more. Now sadly they've used the internet to infect other sheeple who in the past were only a little gullible and a little bit dense. ![]() If you walked too near one they'd grab you and tell you not to sit too near the radiators as that's where the listening devices were. In the old days the only people who believed, say, that the contrails from jet airplanes were the government's way of spreading mind-control drugs were people who sat in the corners of pubs muttering to themselves. Click to expand.Yes, sadly that is a valid point. ![]()
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