Rick Otto said:
I'm disappointed with your easy shrug-off of conspiracy nut persistance. We oughta be smart enough to turn it on its head or something equaly demonstrative!
As it is, they could make the same complaint in your direction, I imagine.
I guess it would depend on the actual conspiracy theory. Take David Icke and his followers, for example. They claim that the British royal family are actually reptilian shapeshifters from another dimension, and that they use Freemasonry and Zionism as a tool for world domination. Obviously, such "theories" are unworthy of a serious response.
Other conspiracy theories are less outrageous, but still bizarre. There is often the claim that Masons are seeking some sort of world domination. To support this claim, other false claims are made, and world leaders who are not Masons are claimed to be (for example, earlier in this very thread, the claim was made that George W. Bush is a Mason, when in reality, Bush is not now, nor has ever been, a Mason).
The facts show otherwise. If we look at history, we see that when Masons have come to political power, the result has been freedom, liberty, and democracy. Among our forefathers who were Masons are George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Paul Revere, John Hancock, Samuel Adams, etc. Certainly, these men could have instituted a form of government that would have allowed them to wield indefinite power. Instead, the instituted the first modern democracy.
The same can be said of Bolivar in South America, Mazzini and Garibaldi in Italy, Kerensky in Russia, etc., etc. There have been plenty of instances where Masons have taken political power. If they wanted to establish some sort of Masonic dictatorship, they easily could have. They didn't.
On the other hand, I confess I envy your trust in the establishment & its official version of reality.
lol, I wouldn't go that far. I believe in the principles and ideals that our government was founded upon. The problem comes from the fact that, these days, those principles and ideals are generally ignored. Regardless of what the conspiracy theorists say, the days when government offices were filled mainly by Masons are long gone. Instead of philosophers and idealists, government is now run by businessmen. There's nothing wrong with being a businessman, per se, but we have to keep in mind that his goal is to make a profit, not mitigate justice.
Maybe we could spin a conspiracy theory that is behind ALL conspiracy theories, in a nefarious plot to round up "nuts" for some dark motive, or science project, etc.
Actually, I do believe there is a conspiracy theory behind most conspiracy theories, and that an unbiased study of modern history will point it out. The modern conspiracy theory is based on the idea of the scapegoat. So much is wrong with the world. It's not
my fault. Therefore, it must be the fault of somebody else.
This "somebody else" must have the quality of "otherness", because he's not like me, the good guy. If I'm a white, Anglo-Saxon Protestant, then the guy to blame may be the Jew, or the Roman Catholic, or the black man, or the Asian, or (insert favorite scapegoat here).
This pattern has been around for quite some time (for a more in-depth and philosophical look at psychological scapegoating, see "Anti-Semite and Jew" by Jean-Paul Sartre, the famous French philosopher who lived through the Nazi occupation).
But there's more to it than this. Conspiracy theorists about Masons generally stem from the Inquisition, and those with like minds. Kepler is correct that early modern Masonry was a catalyst for political change. Imagine 16th and 17th century continental Europe, where the Roman Church still exhibited much political influence. Having already decided that the Reformation was the work of the devil, we also have these upstart new philosophers and scientists challenging the Church. This Galileo guy has the gall to publicly proclaim the heliocentric theory of the solar system. As 17th century churchmen, this is a direct challenge to our divine authority. Therefore, we must certainly silence him.
We must view Galileo as an agent of the devil. By threatening our authority, he threatens that of Holy Mother Church, and thus declares war on Christ. This is the actual mindset of the Churchmen of that period, and we should also mention by threatening their divine authority, their temporal authority is also threatened, which of course also threatens their income (there's that mammon thing again).
As Kepler (I think it was he) alluded to previously, many of these "heretics" (Deists, Pantheists, Protestants, etc.) began joining the Masonic fraternity at this point simply because freedom of conscience was encouraged there. It wasn't long before the continental churchmen recognized this, and labeled it an agent of the devil. For a long, practically comical diatribe against the supposed infernal agenda of Freemasonry in this regard, I can think of nothing finer than the Papal Bull
Humanum Genus, issued by Pope Leo XIII in the late 19th century, which still, by reiterating previous anti-Masonic bulls, calls for Masons to be put to death for heresy.
Albert Pike, a Masonic scholar and, at the time, presiding officer of the Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite of Masonry for the Southern Jurisdiction of the USA, then issued a document titled "A Response of Freemasonry To
Humanum Genus In Behalf of Mankind", which he delivered in oration at a session of the Supreme Council. Here, Pike defends the rights of men to free speech, free government, freedom of religion, and the right to non-Catholic education of children for non-Catholic parents. This response should be read in conjunction with the bulls of the Vatican (it was so blistering that Pike himself, long since passed to his reward, became the subject of the most vicious and ridiculous personal attacks from the conspiracy theorists, whose ideas are derived in large part from the Vatican oppression of the past).
When Freemasonry called for freedom of religion, our opponents charged us with attempting to destroy Christianity.
When Freemasonry called for equal rights of women under the law, our opponents charged us with attempting to the abolish the family.
When Freemasonry called for freedom of speech and of the press, our opponents charged us with support of propagating heretical doctrines.
When Freemasonry called for free, universal public education so that all children may have the chance to succeed, our opponents charged us with destroying the 'divine right" of the Church to educate all children in its doctrines.
The list goes on and on, and shows the origin of the modern conspiracy theory. It is a dark and distasteful thing, a psychological scapegoat based on the status quo's need to instill fear into people in order to maintain their status, a demonization of good and innocent people by scoundrels who use the fear of the illiterate and uneducated to keep them in bondage. This is why I pass over conspiracy theory comments with only a grain of salt: I do not find them worthy of my time, or anyone else's.