Anonymous
ID: iOR8WnV/
7/23/2025, 9:30:35 AM No.511117723
ALMOST NOBODY else believes their (conspiracists) fringe beliefs
some examples: Jews own banks, Jewns control entire world, Jews control medicinal industry and Jews try to destroy white people with the power they possess
(this one is true: Jews are oppressing Palestinians, you cant go around that one, not a conspiracy)
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01461672251338358
JEWISH RESEARCHER found out that conspiracists are totally alone.
Conspiracy theorists themselves drastically overestimate how many people share their beliefs. Researchers conducted eight studies involving over 4,000 US adults and found that while participants believed conspiracy claims just 12% of the time, believers thought they were in the majority 93% of the time.
The study examined beliefs about claims such as the Apollo Moon landings being faked etc. In one example, 8% of participants believed the Sandy Hook shooting was a false flag operation, but that group estimated 61% of people agreed with them. "It might be one of the biggest false consensus effects that's been observed," said co-author Gordon Pennycrook, a psychologist at Cornell University.
The findings suggest overconfidence serves as a primary driver of conspiracy beliefs.
some examples: Jews own banks, Jewns control entire world, Jews control medicinal industry and Jews try to destroy white people with the power they possess
(this one is true: Jews are oppressing Palestinians, you cant go around that one, not a conspiracy)
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01461672251338358
JEWISH RESEARCHER found out that conspiracists are totally alone.
Conspiracy theorists themselves drastically overestimate how many people share their beliefs. Researchers conducted eight studies involving over 4,000 US adults and found that while participants believed conspiracy claims just 12% of the time, believers thought they were in the majority 93% of the time.
The study examined beliefs about claims such as the Apollo Moon landings being faked etc. In one example, 8% of participants believed the Sandy Hook shooting was a false flag operation, but that group estimated 61% of people agreed with them. "It might be one of the biggest false consensus effects that's been observed," said co-author Gordon Pennycrook, a psychologist at Cornell University.
The findings suggest overconfidence serves as a primary driver of conspiracy beliefs.
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