Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Making Money Online In The Conspiracy Theory Niche

Conspiracy theories have been in existence since the beginning of time. Whenever a phenomenon that people don't believe and (or) understand occurs, humans will reconcile these events with facts from which they can form a frame of reference. Whether the resulting theories are accurate or not is known by very few but what is undisputed, is society's fascination with conspiracy theories. As internet marketers, the next logical step from this realisation would be us actually making money from the conspiracy theory niche.
Machiavelli, Nostrodamus and countless other sages and visionaries have achieved acclaim through their ability, or lack thereof, to predict the future. A knowledge of future events provides human beings with a sense of security, one of the most basic needs as Maslow indicated. Any time an internet marketer can satisfy a need, there will be plenty of money to be made. So the question remains, how does one go about making money online in the conspiracy theory niche? The answer is a very simple one, provide relevant information about the subject, market it to the public, deliver the information to the public and maintain contact with your market.
Let us now see how we could apply the above mentioned strategy in practice. I highly doubt that many of the people who read this article are able to predict the future, are members of secret societies or have had paranormal experiences. Fortunately for the astute internet marketer, there are people who claim to possess these qualities or to have experienced these events. Some of these people have gone as far as creating information products that we can help to promote and profit from as a result. These authors can be found on the ClickBank website, which I'm sure you're very familiar with by now. After selecting a product that impresses you and doesn't have too many competing affiliates, your next task would be to market the digital product successfully. There are plenty of ways to market digital products but by far the quickest way to get people to visit your affiliate link would be to make use off PPC (Pay Per Click) advertising. I personally recommend that you create a website in the particular niche you are appealing to, then point your pay per click visitors to it. Having your own website allows you many advantages too numerous to mention in full in this article. The biggest advantage of having your own website, it must be mentioned, is the ability to capture email addresses of your visitors through the use of an autoresponder. Once these tools are in place, the most important element of your marketing efforts has to be completed by you.
I write this with the belief that you have an interest in conspiracy theories. This interest will be the foundation of all the traffic your website will receive because we will convert it into valuable content for your visitors. Contrary to popular belief, content is still king when it comes to internet marketing. Whenever you are in the possession of a website with relevant, interesting and unique content, you may rest assured that your site will be indexed quickly by the search engines but more importantly, you will immediately be able to add value to your potential customers. The more value you add, the more inclined a potential customer will be to purchase through your affiliate link link.
Making money from the conspiracy theory niche is not frighteningly difficult. With sound business fundamentals, internet marketing know how and a genuine interest in the field, an aspirant internet marketer will find it quite easy to be making money from the conspiracy theory niche.
This article was written by Million Dollar Blueprint, a successful internet marketing firm. Did you find these tips on how to make more money on the internet useful? You can find out a lot more about using the internet as your million dollar blueprint by going to http://milliondollarblueprintblog.blogspot.com/ where you can also get instructions to download Napoleon Hill's, Laws of Success in 16 lessons for FREE!


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Friday, 17 October 2014

The Mother of All Conspiracy Theories

Fifty years ago in Dallas, Texas, late in the afternoon of Friday, November 22, 1963, Mrs. Marguerite Oswald of Fort Worth was hauled into the Dallas police station, along with Marina Oswald, Lee Harvey Oswald's Russian-speaking wife, and Ruth Paine, the woman with whom Marina and her two children resided in Irving, some ten miles west. Mrs. Oswald's son had been arrested for two capital crimes that day. A lesser known victim, Officer J.D. Tippit, shot by handgun shortly after 1:10 p.m. would not create as many ripples throughout history as the name of his first victim at 12:30. Of course, we're talking about President John F. Kennedy. The police wanted to know the facts about a certain Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5mm rifle with a four-power scope, which the FBI were determining had been bought through the mail by Alex J. Hidell. Oswald had been arrested with membership cards signed by A.J. Hidell. He also rented a post office box using this identity and had received delivery of the rifle and a.38 revolver back in April, 1963.
Mrs. Oswald wasn't a universally liked person. In fact, her son Lee hadn't even informed her of the birth of his second child at the end of October. He wasn't on great terms with anybody, but his mother was not close to any of her three sons. There is much written about their poor relationship starting from his infancy until the time he left the very ruffled nest at seventeen to join the Marines. A lot is made of the fact that he slept in his mother's bed until he was eleven years old. More grist for the psychologist's mill are the incidents where, as an infant, he was forced to stay locked in his bedroom without toys as a form of discipline. But during questioning by Dallas police about the century's greatest crime committed by a single individual, Marguerite Oswald came to his defense.
She said to Dallas police that she wanted to speak to the FBI. Soon in the company of two men who both identified themselves as Agent Brown, she said she had something of great importance to tell them and proceeded to explain, "... I feel like my son is an agent of the government, and, for the security of my country, I don't want this to get out." She insisted before continuing that she would speak only with agents from Washington. After a bit of wrangling about the geographical purity of their origins she continued, "I want this kept perfectly quiet until you investigate. I happen to know the State department furnished the money for my son to return back to the United States... so please will you investigate this and keep this quiet." Oswald, an avowed Marxist, had defected to Russia, but after a mere few years had begged the U.S. State department to lend him the money to return. All this notwithstanding the fact that he had slashed his wrists so that he could stay in Russia and later entered the US embassy loudly shouting that he wanted to renounce his US citizenship but a few short years before. Clearly, one could argue that mental problems ran in the Oswald family.
Thus began the Mother of All Conspiracies. Little did Mrs. Oswald realize her words would become the seed for thousands of conspiracy theorists the world over, germinating like persistent weeds among the fertile imaginations of ill-informed couch analysts. She'd be in good company: Jessie James' mother had claimed a government conspiracy was responsible for her two sons' murderous behavior almost a century before and the mother of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, of Boston Marathon infamy fifty years later, would claim a similar government plot in spite of incontrovertible evidence to the contrary.
In the Kennedy assassination, the first conspiracy theory to gain public favor was the "Magic Bullet". People reading only the text of the Warren Report postulated that a single bullet traversed Kennedy's back, exited the throat, made a zig-zag to the right in mid-air, gaining in height as well, and entered Governor Connolly's right back, broke five inches of rib, exited, turned right then left, entered his right wrist, broke bones, exited his wrist, turned left again and punctured his thigh, only to fall in pristine condition onto a stretcher at Parkland Memorial hospital. Of course, without saying it directly but using a mocking tone, they wished to imply the Warren Report's conclusion was poppycock. Half a century later, by reconstructing the motorcade and examining the seating arrangements in the limousine, a laser beam proved that this one bullet could have done exactly what was proposed by the official investigators. The Zapruder film shows Governor Connolly twisting his body to the right, lifting his cowboy hat with his right hand at the same time that Kennedy's arms reached for his throat in abject pain. Further examination of the limousine shows that the back bench was higher than the fold-down jump-seat by three inches, itself also offset toward the center of the car by three to four inches, which lines up the subjects with regard to downward trajectory. All this says that the originator of this theory didn't have access to, or know the layout of the seats in the limo, didn't analyze meticulously, if at all, the Zapruder film, didn't attempt to accurately reconstruct the scene - but essentially formulated a conspiracy of unnamed individuals involving the US government, without ever getting off the reading couch.
The next theory to gain wide acceptance, 'Six Seconds in Dallas', postulates that six seconds isn't enough time for an amateur to have fired three bolt-chambered shots. It incorrectly assumes that the first shot was fired less than two seconds before the one that entered the President's neck. How could one lone sniper take aim, fire and reload with a bolt-action rifle in six seconds? It postulates that it's not possible, that another gunman had, on the grassy knoll, fired along with Oswald, the implication being that a conspiracy was required to commit the assassination. Again, we are misguided by investigation techniques that never set foot outside the reading lounge. Examination of the Zapruder film shows that filming of the motorcade down Elm Street began after the limousine had already traveled several yards. Zapruder was saving film because of the cost and short amount of film in cameras back in the day, so it can be determined with reasonable certainty that he only turned on his camera after the first shot had been fired. An investigator in 2011 found archival footage of an FBI crime recreation film shot from Oswald's window days after the event. He discovered that the traffic lantern had a hole in it. Six floors lower than Oswald's position as the motorcade passed almost directly below, this would have been the most difficult shot because the rifle required the most motion to follow the target while he had to look through a four-power scope at something only 70 feet away, where it is known that his vision was obscured first by a large tree and subsequently, a traffic lantern hanging from a pole. This meticulous investigation shows that Oswald most likely hit the traffic lantern with his first shot which deflected, hit the pavement, and burst into fragments injuring a bystander in the cheek. The conspiracy theory goes up in smoke when we discover through better investigation techniques that Oswald had almost eleven seconds to fire three shots, not six seconds.
The Mother of All Conspiracy Theories was perpetrated by Jim Garrison, District Attorney in Louisiana, who contended that since David Ferrie (fired for 'immoral behavior' with boys) had briefly belonged to the same Civil Air Patrol unit as Oswald in 1954, that since David Ferrie can be proven through witness testimony to have spoken about assassination to two unknown, shady Mexicans or people of such racial lineage and one 'Leon', that since David Ferrie also knew one Clayton Shaw, a suspected homosexual and influential local businessman who had offices in the International Trade Mart, the very building in front of which one Lee Harvey Oswald passed out pro-Castro leaflets, that they did conspire to commit the assassination of John F. Kennedy, President of the United States of America. The case, for reasons which would be obvious to first year law students and avid Perry Mason fans, soon fell apart, but this did not stop Oliver Stone from making a sensational movie about it which seems to have captured the imagination of the conspiracy buying public. It's equivalent to making a case in the following manner: that since mafia men A and B knew low-level peon C who may have met Jack Ruby, who probably killed Oswald to shut him up... etc, etc. After listening to this one, your head is spinning, trying desperately to understand all the conjecture, tenuous associations, and murky motivations.
And lastly the United States government itself is guilty of falling prey to conspiracy mania, a disease of the mind first spawned that fateful day in 1963 by Mrs. Marguerite Oswald. The HSCA in 1979, a House committee to investigate assassinations, concluded that there was a 'high probability' that a conspiracy had been responsible for the death of President Kennedy. They based this conclusion solely on the evidence of a taped police motorcycle radio transmission which purports to convey the sound of four shots in Dealey Plaza. Unfortunately, after their determination, a researcher listening to the tape heard faint crosstalk in the background of other police transmissions that only occurred more than a minute after the assassination, a fact which is verifiable and supported by the National Academy of Sciences. In spite of this admission, the HSCA committee did not withdraw its conclusion. By the way, anyone with a microphone clipped to the chest knows that you really shouldn't emphasize your words when speaking by thumping your chest with your hand, because it will have technicians in the studio ripping off their headsets in pain. The point being that sound can be misrepresented. The sad truth is that many people want to believe in conspiracies. One lone, maladjusted loser with a thirty-five dollar mail-order rifle and cheap scope couldn't have successfully assassinated the President of the US without help from powerful, connected and sinister co-conspirators, it just defies credulity.
The truth about all conspiracy theories is - they're just that, unproven theories, calculated misrepresentations of the facts to garner public support usually in order to sell books or make movies, some of the proponents simply wishing to hawk memorabilia to tourists on the grassy knoll behind the book depository for a couple bucks profit, shouting "We know the bullet that killed Kennedy came from right here, right where we're standing". Conjecture and association aren't proof nor evidence, it's the worst form of justice, rumor mongering of the worst kind which would only be known as 'evidence' in countries with secret police and extra-judicial punishments, never meeting burden of proof, never meeting accusers, only finger-pointing and innuendo. Rather than justice, they do a great injustice to craft a story for the purpose of sewing doubt about the fidelity of democratic institutions. It breeds mistrust towards the state and is the ultimate in cynical, unproven indictment, insinuating a nefarious nature to the activities of state apparatus. Conspiracies theorists weave incalculable harm to democracies, fragile abstractions of the mind at the top of our evolutionary thinking susceptible to such malicious and unverifiable charges. Think twice before allowing theorists to gain your support. If you're a member of government, be very careful before manipulating any truth for your own purposes, you'll be sewing the seeds for public mistrust which will soon come back in the form of a conspiracy theory. Jay Leno, popular American talk show host, once joked that a survey found 55% of Americans believed aliens had landed, whereas only 35% believed whatever their government tells them. Marguerite Oswald would be proud of her accomplishment.
Ed Schofield is a writer from Nova Scotia, Canada. His e-books can be found at Amazon.com.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/7776324

Friday, 5 September 2014

Some conspiracy theories just won't stop, I know I often create them for fun out of the blue? Not sure why I like to create conspiracy theories, maybe it's more fun that writing Sci Fi? Who knows, but recently I created one about the cruise ship off the coast of San Diego which had an engine knocked out. First they said it was a fire, then they said it wasn't, now they say it is. Ah ha, everything we need for suspicion, curiosity, and a full-blown - give it to me baby - conspiracy theory - oh yah!
Turns out someone read my cruise ship conspiracy theory where I said the engines were knocked out with an electromagnetic pulse weapon! Guess what someone read that article and has been investigating all this. My reader tells me "We have some good friends who were on that ship. When the engine room "caught fire", it wasn't just a fire...it was an explosion felt all over the ship. Despite the crew coming over the intercom repeatedly saying there was no fire, the ship was engulfed in smoke with all hands running to the engine bay with fire extinguishers."
Oh this good yes! But it gets even better as my reader notes that "the most interesting part is...no one had cell phone reception after the "fire" happened...for the entire duration of the trip. The cell phones worked just prior to the fire, but not after. I'm not sure if this is due to an EMP, or, more than likely, the ship had cell phone jamming equipment on board, which is more and more common these days."
Can you see how the conspiracy plot thickens? Who done it? Was it the Russians, Chinese, or maybe a North Korean submarine? Was it underwater space aliens? I mean this stuff is cool right? So, now I am thinking, hey, I really did create one heck of a conspiracy theory, just like the pros, experts, and counter intelligence agencies spread them? WOW, holy smokes, that is VERY interesting. But what if the conspiracy is real? Okay drum roll now and fade to late night mystery radio theatre background tunes, or better yet the Art Bell - George Noory "Somewhere Out There" theme song. Get down, this is cool stuff. So, could it be real? Maybe?
Of course, the ships relay system, on-ship cell phone + satellite relay might have been taken out if the ship lost power, and those.5 watt cell phones only go a little distance and they were pretty far out to sea, so, that might be part of the cell phone question. Although you'd think the ships cell tower and communication system would be on back-up generator power, so it would seem that it would still work. Or everyone tried to call and it immediately jammed up the cell system which couldn't take the increased traffic with everyone getting on at once.
Still, this brings up a very interesting point of contention, makes me speculate further and ask even more questions now. Anyway, the entire event sure sounded fishy, and there seems to be MUCH more to the story, something is up! But then my reader drops the bomb, I mean really throws in a "what if" - almost making the conspiracy seem real! My reader said; "Some other info they shared, but I didn't think as much of it as they - was that an aircraft carrier arrived at the ship almost immediately and Navy Personnel boarded the cruise ship. Our friends thought much more of this, but this was reported in the media and it appears this was to assist, not for protection."
Turns out that my reader's friends also said that the electricity was out for the duration of the trip, not even back-up power for lighting? Even the satellite phones were not working, but all this points to an electromagnet pulse? Okay another drum roll please, and this time let's play the Twilight Zone theme song and keep this conspiracy theory alive - "don't ya just love it, chicka boom, chicka boom!" Okay it gets better, you see the cruise line company claims it was just a simple fire in the engine room, but my reader asks would that send a massive shockwave through the ship, which kills all the power too? Next, my reader asks the dubious question; "I understand the ship not wanting to start panic at the time by not telling the truth, but there's no reason not to come clean now." And "I find it one heck of a coincidence that this ship was disabled within a day of a missile being launched from the ocean in the same general area (within 200 miles of each other). In both instances, the extent of what actually happened has been withheld, for reasons good or bad."
My reader is speaking to the question of the missile launch off the coast of Los Angeles, also unexplained, and that for sure was not ball-lightning! So, let's consider these additional points of contention. Yes, cruise ships have several back-ups systems for crucial parts of the ship. Medical Facilities, lights, bridge power, communication, etc. A nuclear aircraft carrier, what? 35-36 knots max, not sure, but to go 150 nautical miles 4 + hours. Yes, why was an aircraft carrier nearby? Good question!
The second point is also one I considered as well. I do not believe in coincidence either! I understand there have been some unexplained things which have happened out there some 163 miles South West before, a couple of years back - grape vine stuff. And there have been some interesting "events" discussed in the past off the coast of Catalina too. Someone has a secret out there, and they aren't telling anyone, which is exactly how to get conspiracy theories rocking and rollin' - so please consider all this.
Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank. Lance Winslow believes it's hard work to write 22,000 articles; http://www.bloggingcontent.net/


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/5509968

Friday, 4 July 2014

Most Of Us Love A Conspiracy Theory - Quite Entertaining I'd Say

Most of us love a good conspiracy theory now and again, and it's best when they just cannot be disproven with the facts available. Why do we like these so much, well, perhaps for the same reason people like detective movies or mystery novels, it makes us think, trying to put the clues together. Life is full of uncertainty, and yet, it is the nature of things and what makes the life experience so intriguing. Let's talk shall we?
Not long ago, I watched a conspiracy theory video titled; "20 Dark Predictions for 2013-15: Global Debt Collapse, 2nd Amendment, WW3 Iran & False Flags," and after watching that, I just laughed and told my acquaintance; "These spectacular conspiracy theories are just wonderful muses for all us Science Fiction writers - what would I do without all this blather?" But of course, my conspiracy theory connoisseur didn't want to give up those insane predictions very easily and stated;
"Name one 'spectacular conspiracy theory' that was mentioned, and DEBUNK it, or shut the hell up."
Well, what I think is funny is that these lists appear every year and then when that time period passes they extend the date a few more years, now we are up to not 2013 but 2013-2015. And again in 2015 the world will still be here and not much will have changed, a little more sound and fury for the mindless masses I suppose, something to sell books, newspapers and feed the late night talk show crowd. Hey I am all for it, as a Sci Fi writer, I say bring it on. But you know - reality has its place too right?
I asked my acquaintance if he'd like to debate these conspiracies each individually, and I told him "I'm game - studied up and understand the value in plausible deniability - fun stuff," and then I joked; "you know Chimpanzees and humans can interbreed right - same species - it's just that some of us higher order folks don't fall for the old banana trickery."
As you can see we were ready to get into an action packed dialogue on the latest and greatest conspiracies. What is it about the human mind that causes us to seek to find an understanding of our surroundings, to try to make sense of our world, to put away uncertainty or remove questions of things which seem to defy logic? Could it be that our love of conspiracy theories is simply part of who we are and how we think? Please consider all this and think on it.
Lance Winslow has launched a new provocative series of eBooks on Future Concepts. Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank; http://www.worldthinktank.net


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/8141249

Thursday, 12 June 2014

Conspiracy Theory Madness

The internet is filled with crazy conspiracy theorists and theories. You can do a simple Google search for "conspiracy theory" and come up with thousands of different theories on a whole range of topics. From the music industry is trying to plant subliminal messages in your mind to David Icke's theory of shape shifting reptilian humanoids bent on world domination. Yes, people actually believe this stuff. All of these insane conspiracy theories have made the term "conspiracy" linked directly with "crazy". What if an actual conspiracy is plotted and someone found out about it? It might gain some awareness in the "conspiracy community" but everyone else would just label it as crackpot nonsense.
Because of all the insane conspiracy theories that have been circulating over the years, no one would take a legitimate conspiracy seriously. There have been real conspiracies throughout history. A conspiracy is defined as a group of people secretly conspiring, or plotting, to do something wrong, evil or illegal. To believe this doesn't happen is idiotic. People conspire to do wrongful things all the time. It is just now, thanks to David Icke and others, no one takes conspiracy theories seriously. And for good reason..
People go nuts with this stuff. If you search around in conspiracy forums and websites, you will find extremely paranoid and delusional people. And David Icke telling people there are reptilian shape shifting humanoids controlling the planet does not help. He is feeding there paranoia and gaining a buck off it.
Most of the "conspiracy leaders" exploit peoples fears to make a living. Such as Alex Jones, who has a radio show dedicated to conspiracy theories and sells books and DVDs on the subject. So when you come across a conspiracy theory be weary, because 99% of the time it will be hogwash. However, do not dismiss everything you hear, because real conspiracies exist. Its just the credibility of conspiracies have been ruined by crackpots and entrepreneurs.
Visit Kajanova at http://kajanova.com


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