Why Sandy Hook Massacre Spawned Conspiracy Theories
Benjamin
Radford, LiveScience
Bad Science
Columnist
Date: 16
January 2013
Time: 11:25
AM ET
One month
after the Sandy Hook school shootings, the list of victims continues to grow.
One man, Gene Rosen — who found six children and a bus driver in his driveway,
brought them into his home, fed them and called parents to assure them that
their children were safe — has been harassed by telephone, email and online by
those who think he is lying about his actions, and is part of a conspiracy.
Rosen is not
the first hero to be assaulted and insulted by conspiracy theorists with
doubts. In 2002, when conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel confronted astronaut Buzz
Aldrin and called him a "coward and a liar" for faking
the moon landings, the 72-year-old promptly punched Sibrel in the face.
A group
called the Sandy Hook Truther movement has emerged from the dust and chaos over
the past weeks to claim that the school shooting was all a staged event. Though
many Americans are outraged and incredulous that anyone could doubt that the
tragedy even happened, the Sandy Hook
school shootings follow classic conspiracy thinking. Here are a few
reasons why.
Poignant
political implications
Shootings —
even child murders — happen every day, several times a day, in America.
According to UNICEF, America has the worst record of child abuse and homicide
in the industrialized world, with an average of 27 children killed every week
by their parents and caregivers. But those child murders don't have
implications for enacting a national
policy on gun control.
Most events
producing conspiracy theories have important social and political implications,
and the Sandy Hook shootings are no exception. No one, regardless of what side
of the gun control issue they are on, can deny that guns played a key role in
the Sandy Hook killings. So the conspiracy theorists must instead challenge the
claim that the attack even occurred. They believe it's all a hoax to scare
people into supporting more gun control and a step toward an outright repeal of
the Second Amendment. [5
Milestones in Gun Control History]
'Holes'
in the 'official story'
A common
theme running through conspiracy
thinking is that if you're smart enough, and just look closely enough
at all the news coverage and available information, you can see lies and
contradictions in accounts of the event. Truthers claim that they have found
"absolute proof" that the shootings were a hoax, pointing to a
6-year-old girl named Emilie Parker, who was shot to death in the school
massacre.
Or was she?
They claim that the smoking-gun photographic proof that Emilie is still alive
is that she was photographed after the shooting with President Obama during a visit
with the families. The girl is actually Emilie's sister, wearing the same dress
that Emilie wore in another photograph.
In the
topsy-turvy world of conspiracy thinking, any little girl who resembles Emilie
and is wearing the same dress as one she owned must be her. It could not
possibly be her sister, who could not possibly be wearing either Emilie's dress
or an identical one. Instead, it's obviously proof that the whole shooting was
faked.
But this
claim, even if it were true, raises more questions than it answers. For
example, if Sandy Hook was indeed a "staged event" as claimed, with
Emilie Parker alive and the president part of the conspiracy, why would the
government be so careless as to release a photograph of Emilie, knowing that
she had been reported dead in a carefully orchestrated national hoax? Is a
widely published photo opportunity with the president of the United States
really the best place to hide someone who is supposedly dead?
Conspiracy
theorist websites offer dozens of other examples and pieces of evidence,
ranging from real or perceived contradictions
in eyewitness accounts to conflicting news reports. And indeed there
are some contradictions. [The 10
Most Bizarre Conspiracy Theories]
The minds
of conspiracy theorists
But what the
conspiratorial mind sees as misinformation and lies, others see as merely
perfectly ordinary incomplete and inaccurate information following a
multifaceted tragedy. Especially in the hours and first days after such a
chaotic and horrifying event, witnesses can be confused and mistaken. Police
officers and reporters can misspeak, or be given incorrect information.
Not every
single statement about what occurred, from dozens of different people in
different places at different times, will agree in every detail. Three
different witnesses to a minor car accident will often give three slightly
different accounts of what they saw, so it's unrealistic to expect dozens of
people who were involved in a chaotic school massacre to report exactly the
same things.
Part of the
reason that conspiracy
theories linger is that any contradictory evidence — no matter how
conclusive or compelling — can just be dismissed by claiming that it's part of
the cover-up. There is ultimately no evidence that would satisfy most
conspiracy theorists. Those who distrust the government will use any excuse to
support their beliefs, logical or not. Conspiracy theorists prefer complex
mysteries over simple truths, and find mystery where none exists.
Research has
shown not only that a person who believes in one conspiracy theory is likely to
support others, but also contradictions
don't deter conspiracy theorists.
The idea
that the Sandy Hook massacre was faked is not only absurd, but also an insult
to the victims of the tragedy. The victims are really, provably gone; they are
not safely hidden away somewhere until the Sandy Hook shooting has served its
ultimate goal of taking away America's guns. The bullet holes are there. The
children and adults are dead. Toxic conspiracies, however, will live on.
Benjamin
Radford is deputy editor of Skeptical Inquirer science magazine and author of
six books, including "Media Mythmakers: How Journalists, Activists, and
Advertisers Mislead Us." His website site is www.BenjaminRadford.com.
1 Comments:
Good post, and good links... thanks!
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