The US seems to be the home sweet home of conspiracy theories. From Area 51 and Bigfoot sightings to chemtrails, New World Order, Freemasonry, Illuminati, Sandy Hook, “stolen election,” COVID-19 pandemic… Well, we don’t have that much time for naming them all. But you get an idea.
But wouldn’t it be great to look at the minds of people who actually believe the conspiracy theories and see what it is in there that makes them tick? Thanks to a redditor who posed the question “What conspiracy theory do you believe to be true? What evidence led you to this conclusion?”, we are now able to do just that.
Jodie Turner-Smith felt âemptyâ after her daughter was born.
The 34-year-old actress gave birth to Janie in April last year and has said she âweptâ after her child â whom she has with her husband Joshua Jackson â was born because she felt a sense of âemptinessâ in her womb.
But the âQueen & Slimâ star also said giving birth was a âbeautifulâ experience that showed âthe evidence of [her] biological powersâ.
She told MATCHESFASHION in a new Q&A for their âCurated Byâ series: I remember feeling my womb for the first time after I gave birth, feeling the emptiness, and I just wept. Because it s just as beautiful, as it is bizarre, as it is completely f normal and human. My body has more curves now, more folds, more softness, and all of that is the evidence of my biological powers.
I think, you know, this just reflects that people are excited for the warm weather, feeling good about vaccine and I think just sort of wishing that COVID was over, Arwady said.
Last year, cell phone data showed that people across the city were at home throughout the day a little more than half of the time. Once social distancing guidelines and the statewide stay-at-home order took effect, that number jumped to nearly 80%.
Arwady said last April that the city was working with health data company BlueDot to use anonymous location data from cell phones across the city to track movements.
Professional exonerators contributed to more than 60% of last year s exonerations
Ricky Davis holds up a shirt with the logo of the Northern California Innocence Project after his release from custody at the El Dorado County Jail in Placerville, California, on Feb. 13, 2020. Davis spent about 15 years in prison after being wrongly convicted of second degree murder. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
Conviction integrity units and innocence organizations are contributing to an increasing number of exonerations over time, according to the National Registry of Exonerations.
The two kinds of groups “professional exonerators” that re-examine questionable convictions played important roles in 61% of the 129 exonerations that occurred in 2020, according to the National Registry’s annual report.