Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Playing to the crazies

Nq120816

Wiley Miller plays with fire in today's Non Sequitur. They'll get him for suggesting that everyone who claims to be the victim of a conspiracy is cracked or some kind of egghead. (heh heh)

Did he jump? Did he fall? Or was he pushed???

Uninquiring minds want to know. (Inquiring minds might wonder, but then they'd look into the matter and find out.)

Timing is everything in comedy and today's Non Sequitur, by happenstance, comes a day after I got into an online conversation with someone who still believes that Obama may have been born in Kenya.

I was pretty stunned, because, while it was a screwy idea to begin with, I assumed that things like the birth announcements in the Honolulu papers and the release of the actual for-real birth certificate vouched for by the Hawaiian authorities would convince anyone with any sense at all …

Okay, I still believe that. 

Which led me to ponder some sort of ranking of delusional conspiracy theories.

That is, I can understand why someone would doubt that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. I'm convinced he did and I'm convinced that the purveyors of the JFK assassination conspiracy theories are either in it for the money or are paranoid, but I can understand how some in the public would believe there must have been more people involved.

On the other hand, Elvis is most assuredly dead, and he died, as it happens, 35 years ago today. I haven't heard anyone propose the "Elvis Lives" conspiracy in several years, but I remember being taken into someone's confidence 25 years ago and informed of all the facts that proved he was still alive. And I remember smiling and backing out of the room.

But I would put that way down the list of lunatic delusions, and I think it has faded from vision for two reasons:

1. It began before the Internet was a factor in daily life, and crazy people actually had to find each other in person in order to keep the delusion going, and

2. There was no particular advantage in having people believe it.

The "Kenyan Konspiracy" has not only been kept alive by the ease with which screwballs can gather in cyberspace, but by the fact that it feeds a niche voting bloc of people crazy enough to still believe it but sane enough to find their ways to the polling places in November.

With their photo IDs, of course, because there is a Democratic conspiracy to have an army of phony voters show up and steal the election.

I heard the architect of Pennsylvania's photo ID law on NPR yesterday, explaining that the reason there haven't been more than a handful of unqualified voters turned away while trying to cast a ballot is because the Democrats haven't been caught. But now, thanks to his new law, they will!

And he noted that one vote can swing an election, which neatly cuts out the uncomfortable thought that, if you really did assemble the hundreds of thousands of people who would need to go to the polls, declare themselves to be named Fred Flintstone or Mickey Mouse (having previously conspired to register those fictional voters), and cast enough ballots to sway a national election, the conspiracy could only survive if not one of that horde ever changed parties and decided to spill the beans.

Or got drunk and told someone on the outside.

Or ran into a poll sitter who knew Fred Flintstone, had worked with Fred Flintstone and counted Fred Flintstone among his friends and said, "You, sir, are no Fred Flintstone."

But it is comforting to think that — since we know that all Americans really support the GOP — the only way Democrats could have won the election was with the aid of Fred and Mickey and the starting lineup of the Dallas Cowboys.

So, despite the fact that there is absolutely no credible evidence of even marginally statistically significant voter fraud at the polls, there are a lot of True Believers who support adding a new layer of expensive bureaucracy in order to preserve the rights of people who want to cut bureaucracy and spending.

The Pennsylvania legislator explained that they're going to provide free voter ID cards to people who need them. Which touches off my own conspiracy theory: When did Republicans start saying that entitlements like that are "free"? Won't taxpayers foot the bill for those "free" cards?

So where does "Voter Fraud" fit on the scale between the Grassy Knoll and Elvis Lives?

I'd say fairly close to the Grassy Knoll, mostly because it's being pushed by some powerful politicians, as opposed to the Kenyan Konspiracy, which, these days, is mostly the pet of genuine screwballs and a few fame vampires like the Donald or Michele Bachman, who will say anything to get on television.

Now, where would you place "Alien Abductions" on that scale?

"Faking the Moon Landing"?

"Bush the Deserter"?

"FEMA Concentration Camps"?

"The Strange Breakage of Humpty Dumpty"?

Harry Bliss, in his eponymous daily panel, seems to have captured the zeitgeist:

Tmbss120816
But I was able to obtain some rare government video of a pair of government conspirators at work. This is the video they don't want you to see, because it proves everything!

 

 

 

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Comments 8

  1. I don’t know about your scale — wherever it might have come from, and I have my suspicions — but on my scale of personal annoyance, the “Moon Landing Hoax” is right up at the top. It’s personally annoying because every single quarter at least one of my students gives me reason to go to the trouble of posting a link to this article for the class: http://www.braeunig.us/space/hoax.htm .
    Next quarter, I think I’ll have Buzz Aldrin show up for the appropriate class meeting: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/20/buzz-aldrin-punches-moon_n_241664.html

  2. For me, intelligent design and climate change deniers are on the same level as the Death by the Venus Invaders, only a whole lot more dangerous. At times I contemplate whether climate change deniers are committing crimes against humanity. Take a look at the pictures of the cattle farmers in the midwest that that have been online the last few days. How can they ignore the fact more severe weather patterns were predicted by even the primitive climate change weather models in the late 1970s ~ let alone what we have now? To me, that is the equivalent of the believers that Obama was born in Kenya.

  3. So Pennsylvania will pay for the certified copies of birth certificates – or whatever – that people need to get these ‘free’ IDs? Right.

  4. Oh, where is P.T. Barnum now that we need him? (Well, talk radio, I suppose.)

  5. Don’t forget the Bermuda Triangle! I think that’s where all my socks went.

  6. If people really want to clean up the voter roles, how about the 2.8 million voters that the Pew Center on the States found were registered in more than one state? (http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/story/2012-02-10/pew-study-inaccurate-voter-registration-rolls/53083406/1) How many of those folks who left chads hanging in Florida back in 2000 were snowbirds who had also voted absentee “back home”?
    And then there was the 30-something woman (in her very pricey-looking bikini and cover-up) who was ahead of me at the polls this week. When the poll worker asked if she had her absentee ballot with her, she first denied getting one, then giggled “oh, I guess it’s somewhere in the house.” She was sent to another station and I didn’t see what happened next.

  7. The anti-vaccine crowd is one that I think is truly dangerous. Really becoming a problem on the west coast and in Australia (for some reason.)
    I think the internet has really helped allow the Republican party to ramp up the voting fraud hysteria with a growing number of people only viewing news sources that don’t give more balanced information.

  8. Fran, they aren’t paying for the documents you need to get the “free” ID because the people will need them for something else anyway. You know, all those things they never needed them for before.
    And Sherwood, I thought about posting the Buzz Aldrin clip, but, of course, I didn’t have to. And the Mork piece is so deadly accurate about these people. Exidor would be a superstar on Facebook today.
    As for vaccines, go here, listen to this. One of the smarter show around:
    http://www.onthemedia.org/2012/may/11/why-myth-vaccines-cause-autism-survives/
    Wiley tells me this was actually a repeat from four years ago. I told him stupidity hadn’t changed a lot since then.

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