https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stigmergy

Many of these things are technically not conspiracies, just stigmergy.    The 
US defeat in Afghanistan – after the longest war in US history, 20yrs+  -  is 
one example.  Congress, The White House,  the mass media, the Pentagon lie and 
deceive for decades and get away with it.  The WSJ claimed 6 intelligence 
reports about Afghanistan said nothing about the whole thing collapsing.

And that harmful trend continues as no one seems to scream about an ineffective 
US intelligence community.  I also think the same thing will happen with 
Russia/Ukraine and the sanctions Cold War.

All too often science goes the same way.  Termites denying anomalies such as 
Cold Fusion obediently.

From: Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2022 9:49 AM
To: Vortex <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Bearden dead and cheniere.org gone

ROGER ANDERTON 
<r.j.ander...@btinternet.com<mailto:r.j.ander...@btinternet.com>> wrote:

This is getting too diverted. What you were saying sounded like a conspiracy 
theory.
Perhaps it did sound like that, but it was not. Because --

1. A conspiracy is organized and surreptitious. The opposition to cold fusion 
was unorganized and very much in the open. Opponents published books, papers, 
newspaper editorials, editorials in Nature and so on. They were proud to lead 
the attack against cold fusion.

2. It is not a "theory;" it is a fact. You can read the books and editorials. A 
"conspiracy theory" means an assertion that a hidden group of people carried 
out an organized campaign of opposition. There is no proof, and you don't know 
who the people are. Although you might speculate about who they are. If I had 
said: "we don't know who opposed cold fusion, but I suspect it was the editors 
at Nature and the plasma fusion researchers" that would be a theory. I am not 
saying that. I am saying: "we know who opposed cold fusion, because the editor 
at Nature published signed editorials excoriating it, and the plasma fusion 
researchers at MIT called Boston newspaper reporters and demanded that 
Fleischmann and Pons be arrested for fraud." Those researchers never denied 
doing that. We have the news reports and quotes from them.

There is a world of difference between an unsubstantiated conspiracy theory and 
attacks carried out in public by people who bragged about their role in 
destroying cold fusion. Calling that a "theory" is like saying "perhaps it was 
the Japanese navy that attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, but we will never know 
for sure."



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