Questions: We Never Went to the Moon pp. 12-17
For any new readers, the page numbers in the title refer to the PDF file found on the Internet Archive . The numbers do not line up with the page in the book, so far they are about five pages behind. Researching conspiracy theories has changed my brain in a few important ways. The first is that I cannot read the news without filtering it into a conspiratorial interpretation. It’s not that I believe it, but that I try and interpret the news as they would. For example, president-elect Trump’s pick for secretary of Treasury is just a normal big business executive; but I also know that he’s worked for both George Soros and the WEF (World Economic Fund) which makes it interesting for those people who rabidly support him. The second way that conspiracy theories have changed my brain is that I can longer just read a rhetorical question without getting angry at the writer. The “?” just hangs in a sentence in much the same way that a brick doesn’t. The rhetorical question is the path of th...