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by jcranmer
3565 days ago
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Conspiracy theorists (in general) have been known to make stuff up, and non-experts who believe in them can easily parrot this stuff thinking it's true. A great example of this in history is the "Magic Bullet Theory" of JFK's assassination, which holds that the single bullet is false because the bullet would have had to make sharp turns to get to its next target, which is almost entirely based on made-up positions in a fake film. Thus, for an article which is espousing that the towers came down only via controlled demolition, it is necessary to find independent sources of all facts mentioned, even ones as pedestrian as the expected weight of a floor of a building. (I haven't done the math myself, so I hold no opinion as to whether or not the numbers in the article are correct). |
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Regarding "fake film" you seem too be referring to Oliver Stones "JFK" which is not the source of the Magic Bullet Theory, or any of the theories there, it is merely a collection of the theories prominent at the time, and then fictionalized.