You’ve watched Jesse Ventura’s TV series right? He does some major deep dive into things like the New World order and FEMA camps and Denver airport.
Hatherence on
Nonfiction:
* Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes
Fiction:
* Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson, a great classic but pretty old by now
* Gibbon’s Decline and Fall by Sheri S. Tepper, also pretty old. I have mixed feelings about this book, but you may like it.
Practical_Ass_3066 on
The Demon Haunted World by Carl Sagan
Hail__Reaper on
I haven’t actually read it yet but Foucault’s pendulum by Umberto Eco seems like it would be up your alley
Low_water_crossing on
The Illuminatus! Trilogy – Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
More of an acid trip parody of conspiracy theory and occult themes. But all the classic conspiracy theroies are in there.
ApparentlyIronic on
**CHAOS: by Tom O’Neill**
It’s a nonfiction that disputes a lot of the official narrative of the Charles Manson case. The author finds proof that points to CIA involvement, brain-washing, and deeper conspiracy to the rise of the cult. The author has his theories, but is quick to point out when he doesn’t have all the facts. Most of the threads are left unsolved and the author admits that he doesn’t know exactly what happened; just that it did not happen the way that Bugliosi (the DA) said it did in his best-selling book *Helter Skelter*
ConvenientCowboy on
George Orwell’s 1984
wanderain on
Foucault’s Pendulum by Umberto Eco
audacesfortunaiuvat on
I’m always intrigued by interviews with David Icke, but have not read his books because he is very thorough on TV. Any good?
Books_Of_Jeremiah on
Presstitutes in the Service of the CIA: A Confession from the Profession by Udo Ulfkotte
MllePerso on
Not a book (yet!) but Alison McDowell’s “maps” of elite money connections are pretty thorough.
They’re a bit out of date at this point, but The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein and Griftopia and The Divide by Matt Taibbi also give you a pretty good idea of how elite corruption works. (Ironically, Naomi Klein has completely sold out by this point and recently published an “I’m not one of those awful conspiracy theorists!” book. But Matt Taibbi has kept right on trucking and is currently working on a 2020-flavored Griftopia update book.)
11 Comments
You’ve watched Jesse Ventura’s TV series right? He does some major deep dive into things like the New World order and FEMA camps and Denver airport.
Nonfiction:
* Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes
Fiction:
* Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson, a great classic but pretty old by now
* Gibbon’s Decline and Fall by Sheri S. Tepper, also pretty old. I have mixed feelings about this book, but you may like it.
The Demon Haunted World by Carl Sagan
I haven’t actually read it yet but Foucault’s pendulum by Umberto Eco seems like it would be up your alley
The Illuminatus! Trilogy – Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
More of an acid trip parody of conspiracy theory and occult themes. But all the classic conspiracy theroies are in there.
**CHAOS: by Tom O’Neill**
It’s a nonfiction that disputes a lot of the official narrative of the Charles Manson case. The author finds proof that points to CIA involvement, brain-washing, and deeper conspiracy to the rise of the cult. The author has his theories, but is quick to point out when he doesn’t have all the facts. Most of the threads are left unsolved and the author admits that he doesn’t know exactly what happened; just that it did not happen the way that Bugliosi (the DA) said it did in his best-selling book *Helter Skelter*
George Orwell’s 1984
Foucault’s Pendulum by Umberto Eco
I’m always intrigued by interviews with David Icke, but have not read his books because he is very thorough on TV. Any good?
Presstitutes in the Service of the CIA: A Confession from the Profession by Udo Ulfkotte
Not a book (yet!) but Alison McDowell’s “maps” of elite money connections are pretty thorough.
They’re a bit out of date at this point, but The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein and Griftopia and The Divide by Matt Taibbi also give you a pretty good idea of how elite corruption works. (Ironically, Naomi Klein has completely sold out by this point and recently published an “I’m not one of those awful conspiracy theorists!” book. But Matt Taibbi has kept right on trucking and is currently working on a 2020-flavored Griftopia update book.)