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by Alex Newman       
The federal government has decided to unconstitutionally waste more taxpayer money by demonizing and supposedly debunking “conspiracy theories” on the State Department’s propaganda-peddling website America.gov, prompting ridicule and criticism across the world.
Under the banner “Conspiracy   Theories and Misinformation,” the website lists a variety of   “popular conspiracy theories” with icons for readers to click on and   “learn about.” According to the site, “Conspiracy theories exist in the   realm of myth, where imaginations run wild, fears trump facts, and   evidence is ignored. As a superpower, the United States is often cast as   a villain in these dramas.”
Among the theories the site purports to debunk are questions surrounding   the September 11th attacks. Much of the “debunking”   comes from the words of former U.S.-government asset Osama bin Laden.  Ironically, just this week  the Washington Post reported   that CIA officers admitted to creating fake Osama video tapes for   propaganda purposes.
Adding to the government's credibility problem, the BBC managed to  track  down some of the alleged suicide hijackers. They turned out to be  alive  and well, protesting their innocence and living in places like   Morocco. Though it has not been proven that the U.S. government played  an active role in the 9/11 attacks, the government's attempts to debunk  the debunkers fall flat.
The State Department also attempts to minimize what it refers to as   “economic conspiracy theories,” claiming the idea that “powerful   individuals are motivated overwhelmingly by their desire for wealth” is   false. It also labels a “fantasy” the notion that the U.S. employs   “economic hit men” to entrap countries with huge amounts of debt. One  popular financial analysis site ZeroHedge.com   rebuts the government's claim and recommends readers check out the  book Confessions   of an Economic Hitman for “the truth on this matter.” In the  book, which the State Department repeatedly attacks on its site, the  author claims he was charged with doing precisely what the website  denies — entrapping countries with debt. And regardless of the accuracy  of that book, virtually everyone knowledgable about country-to-country  aid accepts as fact that international loans under the guise of "foreign  aid" always come with strings attached, often called  "conditionalities," and usually enrich the elite and politically  well-connected at the expense of everyone else. 
In the same section, America.gov claims the idea held by people who   “fear international influences” that the “United States is sacrificing   its sovereignty to an imaginary ‘North American Union’” is also false.   But a careful   review of the facts reveals that a merger is proceeding along the   same lines as the development of Europe’s super state — a “free trade”   agreement, cooperation on “security and prosperity,” and  much  more.    
On the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the site claims “all   evidence indicates that Oswald acted alone.” Except that is patently   untrue, and almost everybody knows it. The U.S. House of   Representatives’ Select Committee on Assassinations concluded in its report   that: “The committee believes, on the basis of the evidence available   to it, that President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a   result of a conspiracy.” But the State Department said “all evidence   indicates that Oswald acted alone.” Clearly that is not case.
The very next point turns out to be blatantly false as well: “Today,   some conspiracy theorists falsely claim President Obama was not born in   the United States, making him ineligible to be president. However,  there  is no doubt that he was born in Hawaii.” Anybody who doubts that  there  is doubt about where Obama was born should simply consult this   Angus-Reid poll, which shows that in October of 2009, 30 percent  of  Americans did not believe Obama was born in the U.S. Whether he was  or  not is irrelevant, since there is clearly a high level of doubt.  Simply  claiming (falsely) that “there is no doubt” does nothing to  debunk  “conspiracy theories.” 
The website also features some videos. The first   one includes author of Religion and The Racist Right and   political science professor Michael Barkun, who warns that conspiracy   theories “can be socially dangerous.” Ironically, Barkun also discusses a   “free market of ideas,” which one would think should be free of   government confiscating wealth from citizens and creating websites to   promote a point of view.
But it doesn‘t work that way. Following some of the links on the site’s   “conspiracy theories” section reveals that the State Department  actually  operates its very own “Counter   Misinformation Team.” Unfortunately, the department’s “Bureau of Public  Affairs”  did not respond to questions by press time about the cost  of creating  and operating its various propaganda outfits or the  “conspiracy theories  and misinformation” section of the website.   
But while purporting to battle inaccurate information, exploring   America.gov shows that the department is busy spreading its own   misinformation. Ads placed throughout the Internet under the banner “Adapting  to a  Changing Climate” guide readers to State Department articles  on  America.gov like “The   Need for Action on Climate Change Is Urgent.” The page is shared   with a picture of a lonely polar bear (trumping facts and logic with   fear-based hysteria) and propaganda videos citing the discredited,   misinformation-peddling United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on  Climate Change. To understand the enormous amount of lies and  exaggerations published by the panel, read about Amazongate,  Africagate,  Glaciergate,  Chinagate,  Netherlandsgate,  or countless other scandals that have emerged in recent months. Now  that is true misinformation, but the State Department's "Team" has  evidently not taken the time to explain those inconvenient facts.
The America.gov site also features videos like “Youth Empowerment  Through Hip-Hop,”  “Diversity: Dearborn, Arab Capital of America” and  all sorts of other  videos touting “democracy” and other topics. The  cost of these  operations must have been enormous. Their value, however,  is questionable.
As bad as that is, the Obama administration’s Information and Regulatory  "Czar" Cass  Sunstein reveals a sinister view of unapproved thinking  even more  chilling than the State Department’s. “Those who subscribe to  conspiracy  theories may create serious risks, including risks of  violence, and the  existence of such theories raises significant  challenges for policy and  law,” he wrote in a 2008 research   paper. Sunstein proposed using secret government agents for   “cognitive infiltration” of groups that do not subscribe to the   government’s various conspiracy theories. He even suggested banning or   taxing conspiracy theorizing, which he defines as "an attempt to explain  an event or  practice by reference to the machinations of powerful  people, who have  also managed to conceal their role." Perhaps a tax on  conspiracy  theories could go toward funding more  pro-government-regulation  propaganda contests — like this   one held by the Environmental Protection Agency. 
While many conspiracy theories are obviously inaccurate, some are not   (as noted on ZeroHedge, see Gulf  of  Tonkin and CIA  drug  trafficking). Therefore, it is important to question the  government’s version of truth by examining each theory and evaluating it  on its merits before forming a definitive conclusion. Truth can stand  on its own in the marketplace of ideas; it does not require taxpayer  subsidies to support it. And Americans are smart enough to decide for  themselves.
What is dangerous is not conspiracy theorizing, it’s allowing the government to go so far outside the bounds of the Constitution that it now steals the wealth of its citizens to tell them what to think. While it’s impossible to tell how much covert propaganda the government is producing (see Operation Mockingbird), the trend toward more and more resources being spent by government on overt propaganda is ominous and troubling. It should be halted immediately, not just because the government has no constitutional authority to do it, but because it’s morally repugnant and worse than counterproductive.
Shame!
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