Everyone has that one friend who's a
little too into
conspiracy theories. While it can be fun to think that the world is run
by a handful of master manipulators, these conspiracy theories are just
that — theories. Nothing more.
On the other hand, conspiracy theories only
sound crazy when they aren't
totally true.
Here
are a bunch of former conspiracy theories that ended up being
completely true. (Just don't show this to your friend who's obsessed
with 9/11, or you'll never hear the end of it.)
1. GM Streetcar Conspiracy.
There was a rumor that between 1938 and 1950,
officials at General Motors were buying up train and light rail systems
in cities so that people would have to buy more cars. The only falsity
in this theory turned out to be that it wasn't just GM that was in on
this ploy, but several other companies, as well.
2. General James Wilkinson.
Although a hero during the War of 1812, it
was always rumored that James Wilkinson was making deals with the
Spanish, even when he achieved the highest rank in the American Army.
When he died, it was revealed that he was indeed on the Spanish payroll.
At one point, he even tried to convince Kentucky to secede from the
Union and become a Spanish colony.
3. Katyn Massacre.
In 1940, Stalin ordered the massacre of
20,000 Polish military officers, and used the Nazis as the obvious
scapegoat. It wasn't until 1990 that the Soviet Union began
investigating the possibility that they were behind the attacks. It was
confirmed in 2010 that they really were the ones who ordered the
killings.
4. North Korean Abductions.
Although denied by the North Korean
government at the time, between 1977 and 1983, North Korean agents began
abducting Japanese citizens. The Japanese government saw it as a
conspiracy theory at first, until damning evidence was uncovered. In the
end, they got North Korea to admit to abducting 13 of their citizens.
There are believed to have been hundreds more.
5. Watergate.
While trying to report on the Watergate
scandal, reporters were harassed and their phones were tapped in an
effort by the Nixon administration to cover up what ended up being one
of the most shockingly true conspiracy theories in American history.
6. Jimmy Savile.
For decades, there were rumors that British
TV personality Jimmy Savile was molesting children, but it wasn't until
his death that hundreds of allegations of sexual abuse (and even
necrophilia) against him appeared. It was soon discovered that not only
was Savile a predator, but he might have been the most dangerous one
England had ever seen.
7. Valentin Bondarenko, "the Lost Cosmonaut."
There have been rumors that Yuri Gagarin wasn't the first man in space, but only the first man to survive space.
The allegation here is that other cosmonauts made it up into space, but
because they died, their existence was erased by the Russian
government. Valentin Bondarenko was a cosmonaut-in-training when he had
an accident in a low-pressure altitude chamber and died. The Russian
government cut him out of all the photographs and pretended he never
existed until 1980. So while Bondarenko never made it to space, it might
be possible that he wasn't the only fallen hero the Russians decided to
hide.
While there is good evidence that crises like 9/11 and the Kennedy
assassination went down exactly how we were told, the same could be said
about these events before the truth was known.
I'm not saying we
should get out the tin foil and make funny hats just yet, but maybe we
should be nicer to our conspiracy-obsessed friends before they get the
chance to say, "I told you so!"
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