Andrew Korybko
Global Research
The “secret police” (as they’d be described by the
Mainstream Media if any other country’s version of the FBI was being
reported on) believe that a connection exists between so-called
“conspiracy theories” and domestic terrorism, and while there have
veritably been some people who hold such controversially defined beliefs
and ended up killing others, it’s anti-American to suspect that anyone
engaged in seeking out all sides of every story (no matter how possibly
implausible) automatically qualifies as a potential terrorist.
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Global Research
The Mainstream Media reported earlier this month
on an intelligence bulletin released by the FBI’s Phoenix office back
in May alleging that a connection exists between so-called “conspiracy
theories” and domestic terrorism, and while there have veritably been
some people who hold such controversially defined beliefs and then ended
up killing others, it’s anti-American to suspect that people who don’t
believe the official narrative about various events automatically
qualify as potential terrorists.
***
The de-facto criminalization of free speech is an ongoing trend in American society that’s already pressured a lot of people to self-censor their beliefs in public in order to avoid official scrutiny from the authorities or harassment by their political opponents, but an intelligence bulletin released
by the FBI’s Phoenix office back in May and only reported on by the
Mainstream Media earlier this month might spread the dragnet even
further by de-facto criminalizing the online pursuit of additional
information that contradicts the official narrative about various
events.
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