Essays on Conspiracies by Julian Assange

August 1st, 2010

There’s very little here; a vague framework for reducing “conspiratorial power” based on connected graphs. This seems like an introduction to a longer essay.

Via: Cryptome:

CRYPTOME

31 July 2010

These essays on conspiracies by Julian Assange (me@iq.org) were retrieved today from his website iq.org. The first from the currently active site, dated Novermber 10, 2006, and the second at archive.org, dated December 3, 2006.

http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf
and
http://web.archive.org/web/20070110200827/http://iq.org/conspiracies.pdf

Related: WikiLeaks Founder, Constantly Annoyed that People Are Distracted by False Conspiracies Such as 9/11″

2 Responses to “Essays on Conspiracies by Julian Assange”

  1. Eileen says:

    Hmm. What;s the deal. Are people going to start attacking Assange now? I don’t understand what’s going on.
    I don’t care if Assange believes in what I believe in so why should you.
    Heck I go read What Really Happened.com and what to strangle the guy cause he refuses to believe the planet isn’t heating up.
    So am I going to go and blast his ass off the planet with rude comments about him not be like minded with me? Don’t think so. Might have have a few years ago.

    Do we really have to rip peoples heads off and dice them and slice them and put them in the wood chipper when they might speak truth to power?
    Hmm. Witness Michael Ruppert.

    I just wish we would let this thing unfold. I think this Wikileaks incident has the potential to become a beautiful flower. I would rather nuture this than blast it out of existence with cross examination on the Internet blogosphere.

    Give the Wikileaks project a chance I tell myself (even if he doesn’t believe in the 9/11 religion we hold dear).

    There will only be good for this world from this I think. I’m going to go read this on this fine last day of July 2010:
    http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/06/07/100607fa_fact_khatchadourian?printable=true#ixzz0v0GVoa7c

    Hope your August is a pleasant one.

  2. Larry Glick says:

    The nature of human beings is that we cannot be trusted. Governments mistrust their subjects and the subjects mistrust their governments. Here in America, we are given the “image” of a free society. Actually, it is all a ruse to make us hesitate to question the government about national security and such. How long did it take the “great majority” to catch on to the lies and manipulation of our government’s involvement in Vietnam? It depends. Do you measure things like that by time, or by lives?

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