This is a simple one. The internet has become a great viral base for conspiracy theories to spread. If you need a piece of writing that blindly agrees with your ideas, regardless of the scientifically proven truth out there, it's got your back! Hell, you can even get studies from pubmed that do the same - let me clarify a detail to anyone who links to a study from this site.

It’s the equivalent of that one guy who used Wikipedia as a source in their dissertation (...guilty). The US national library of medicine is managed by the community, meaning its rather easy to get a study there.

One such example used is right here that seems to go through EMF waves being a detriment to human health, creating a widely cited quote in other 5G studies with one key issue - the writers forget to mention that 5G waves have been with us since the 1970s (analogue TV and radio) and they have not made a single person ill, caused cancer, or carried a virus. So, what happens when you call this out? Well, there’s a backup plan for that...

7 - Talk about the Cyrus a parsa court case

So maybe you weren’t phased by this 5G conspiracy theorist’s use of someone’s Facebook post or a YouTube video from some user named something like “thetruthisoutthere69.” That’s no problem because they have another burden of proof in their arsenal. Use legitimate links that have no real relevance to the point they are making and use them as a bit of a glue to stick together parts of their narrative.

One that’s regularly shared is a legal battle between Cyrus a Parsa (founder and CEO of the AI organisation - get ready to see that name a lot if you look into this rabbit hole) and Google, that extended to CEOs of other companies like Facebook and Microsoft. The case dives into some of the more suspect behaviours of tech companies and their use of AI, and accuses them of “endangering the world’s citizens” by weaponising AI.

Let’s start by looking at Cyrus’ Twitter account, and you’ll see the account of a rather bored conspiracy theorist with a lot of money and time on his hands. Same as the above point, none of his 5G health impacts seem to take into account the waves have been around for decades in other forms. It will come as absolutely no surprise that he is of a right wing persuasion, spreading the bullshit that people were being programmed by AI to attack President Donald Trump. Let’s be honest, this court case is for the exposure and PR around this conspiracy, and will be promptly thrown out. Plus, his theories run suspiciously close to the Q-Anon works, so this should be a red flag. Speaking of…

8 - Q-Anon gets referred to a lot

If there is one thing that should discredit any theory immediately, it should be the ties to Q-Anon. You remember them, right? They were the source of the theory that Hilary Clinton had a hand in child sex trafficking through a pizzeria in Washington D.C, which led to someone bursting in with a gun.

They’ve been a fine bunch of pricks around the Coronavirus - spreading rumours of it being a Cabal Weapon launched by the democrats to disrupt Trump’s election chances. Dear Q, please do get in the sea.

9 - Blame Bill Gates