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Why Do People Believe In Conspiracy Theories

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Why Do People Believe In Conspiracy Theories
How many people believe in conspiracy theories?
According to multiple surveys done by J. Eric Oliver and Thomas J. Wood, writers in the American Journal of Political Science, over fifty percent of the American public believe in at least one conspiracy theory, which is over one-hundred sixty million people. Though so many believe in them, some theories stand more considered than others. Theories like aliens existing become much more commonly accepted, as twenty-nine percent of people surveyed believe in that. Other theories such as lizard people controlling society through political power stay less commonly accepted, at four percent of the American population believing that theory. They define a conspiracy theory as the explanation that makes reference to a hidden agenda, which contradicts the commonly accepted explanation for that same phenomenon.

So are conspiracy theorists just looking for easy answers?
No: According to the research done in a survey with college students many factors contribute to why people believe in conspiracies. However, a person looking for the easy way out in a complex situation is never one of them. Most people understand that events happen
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He was found dead at a resort in Texas, alone with a pillow over his head. Many conspiracy theorists have been hypothesizing a more forbidding meaning behind Antonin Scalia’s death. Using the pillow over his head as a foundation to a murder plot. Some theorists going as far as saying the president himself killed him. Though there were some anomalies surrounding his death, most have been ruled out. The police confirmed that the pillow was indeed over his head, but not on his head as if he was suffocated. And both his physician and police have confirmed his death was caused by natural causes, having had sleep apnea, diabetes, and other major health concerns. But many theorists continue to believe

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