I think he's right. But I think there is more to say; specifically, about why they've seem to become so popular recently.
For those of you who don't know, many of my friends were deeply involved in staging 'Cosmic Trigger' - which has an explicit focus on conspiracy theories. I saw the play back in 2014 in Liverpool and then got a little more involved when it was re-staged in May 2017 for a 23 date run in London. The play's key protagonist is Robert Anton Wilson (RAW) who's work The Illuminatus! Trilogy (written with his friend Robert Shea) kick started the modern fascination with the Illuminati.
I also talk quite a bit about conspiracy theory and its relation to money in the extended interview I did with Prof Max Haiven and Cassie Thornton which appears in Burning Issue Super Deluxe Edition.
So conspiracy theories, and the question of the growth in their popular appeal, have been rattling around in my head for a while.
Two explanations tend to pop up to explain the rise.
First, social media is often credited with an important role. It can easily disseminate information to a wide audience without any verification or fact-checking.
And second - referencing back beyond the birth of social media to the 1950's when RAW's story (with Kerry Thornley et al) really begins - is the decline of religion. There's a saying that nature abhors a vacuum. When we no longer believe in God, we don't believe in nothing. Rather, something else comes along to help us fill the void. Conspiracy theories, as Alan Moore suggests, fulfill a need.
I want to suggest a third idea, though. I think conspiracy theories are more prevalent now because they're a byproduct of turbo-charged C21st capitalism. Specifically, I think that they arise from a belief that consumer choice (and the property rights upon which they're based) are constitutive of individual sovereignty. We tend to experience sovereignty - we enact it - by and through the choices we make as consumers - that is, how we spend our money.
Many articles have been written about how these days we act as 'spiritual consumers'; picking and choose elements from religions which seem to fit into, or enhance, our lifestyles and values. There is, I suppose, a way of seeing this as a good thing - in the way that we can pick all the good bits from religions - compassion, forgiveness, love - and leave out all the nasty bits like the sexual hang ups and the chopping off of various bits of our bodies (hands, foreskins, labia, etc etc).
But I'm not so sure that it's a good thing. I'm not sure that our veneration of consumer choice as our primary (and most commonly enacted) expression of sovereignty is really good for our soul, at all. In fact, I think acting as a consumer, especially in matters of spirituality, actually diminishes us.
Consumer choice depends on property rights and under capitalism (and neoliberalism) these are presented as the bedrock of liberty. Bitcoin, for example, is all about making property rights (in currency) unassailable - or, you might say 'sacrosanct'. We can be equal only in so far as property rights are equally enforced across the population. And failing that we can be equal only in so far as we all have the ability to inflict lethal violence at the level of the individual.
For the hardcore bitcoin bros, freedom is defined by cold storage and a gun. Much as I think this is a truly appalling vision of the possibilities for human liberation, I do think it is a legitimate extension of the logic of neoliberalism. It expresses an extreme form of the paranoia and alienation we see so clearly marked out in the territory of conspiracy.
But of course, as has been so apparent during this pandemic, most of us don't think like this at all. The logic arising from property rights (and consumer choice as constitutive of individual sovereignty) is repressed, or perhaps sublimated, and it turns out that people are prepared to make huge sacrifices (both of their lives and livelihoods) in order to save and help others.
Back at The Church of Burn last December 2019 (it seems like a lifetime ago but it isn't even six months) David Graeber talked about Money Burning as 'the breaking of a spell - 'a disenchantment'. This has stayed with me. I would add that I hope the ritual act also 're-enchants'.
By burning money the mode of thinking - from which conspiracy is born (the belief in the trinity of consumer choice, property rights and liberty) is exposed as a lie. True sovereignty, true freedom is contained within the giving up of property. True sovereignty stems from sacrifice.
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UPDATE: A comment from a friend on facebook made me realize that I could clarify my argument here quite easily by saying this:
We now feel - more than ever - justified in believing whatever we like. As if truth has become a commodity that we can summon at will... like a takeaway meal.
We end up with the situation where this or that conspiracy theory fits my particular set of prejudices - I want it - so therefore I have the 'right' to believe in it. I'm suggesting that this thought process has been accelerated by neoliberalism.
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I spent a long while trying to write piece on sovereignty and sacrificial logic for Burning Issue. I didn't manage to complete it, because I got too busy with editing the magazine. But here's an extract.
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