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Making sense of conspiracy theorists It is 20 years since Jon Ronson wrote ‘Them,’ his eye-popping investigation into conspiracy theorists. Now, in a world awash with tales of pedophile elites and puppet masters, is he any closer to understanding it all? By Jon Ronson / The Guardian In 1999 I sat in a Vancouver cafe with a group of anti-capitalist activists. They’d just returned from protesting the WTO in Seattle to find a new, far stranger foe in town David Icke. He was there to lecture about how the ruling elite are actually child-sacrificing, blood-drinking pedophile lizards in human disguise. Nobody had ever suggested such a thing before, and the activists were working to get his books seized and destroyed. They were alarmed not just by the echoes of anti-semitism but because something startling was happening. Icke was beginning to win over people who should have been on their side. I wrote back then that they were “seeing an omen of the blackest k ....
Stranger than fiction: Jon Ronson tries to get to the truth about conspiracy theorists. Illustration: Michelle Thompson Stranger than fiction: Jon Ronson tries to get to the truth about conspiracy theorists. Illustration: Michelle Thompson It is 20 years since Jon Ronson wrote Them, his eye-popping investigation into conspiracy theorists. Now, in a world awash with tales of paedophile elites and puppet masters, is he any closer to understanding it all? Sun 11 Apr 2021 03.00 EDT In 1999 I sat in a Vancouver café with a group of anti-capitalist activists. They’d just returned from protesting the WTO in Seattle to find a new, far stranger foe in town – David Icke. He was there to lecture about how the ruling elite are actually child-sacrificing, blood-drinking paedophile lizards in human disguise. ....