Sunday, November 17, 2024

These people were deep conspiracy theory believers for years. Then came an earth-shattering moment

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There’s a moment Stephanie Kemmerer regrets so deeply that her voice cracks as she recalls it, though it happened 10 years ago.

She was chatting with a homeless woman outside a local shop about the 2001 terrorist attacks in the US.

The woman shared that a friend of hers had been on one of the planes that crashed into the Twin Towers.

“I looked right in her eyes and I said, ‘There were no planes’,” Stephanie says, drawing breath.

“I don’t know who this woman is, but if I could ever … I mean, there’s no way that I’d ever find her. But if I could, I would apologise. I would fall on my knees. That is just the coldest, cruellest thing I’ve ever done.

“But you can’t apologise to everyone.”

In her darkest place, the US-based Stephanie falsely believed the Twin Towers were destroyed by government design, and that the hijacked planes were edited into video footage.

She also falsely believed that the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, in which 20 children and six adults were murdered, was staged as part of a government plot to take away Americans’ guns — and that the children’s grieving parents were “crisis actors”.

(She’s thankful she was never one of the many conspiracy theorists who have harassed, and who continue to attack, those parents.)

Today Stephanie is, in her words, a conspiracy theorist in recovery.

Stephanie wants to share her experience to help others.(Supplied/T-Shirt @SmileyDieHappy)

And she wants to help others who are trapped in a world of false beliefs to recover, too.

“Conspiracy theories, they’re just a Bandaid over a broken bone … If you can solve the internal issue, then the conspiracy theories could theoretically just fall away,” she says.

How Stephanie fell down the rabbit hole

As a young child Stephanie was intensely interested in mysteries: lost cities, UFOs, Bigfoot, Spring-heeled Jack and other “weird stuff”.

She draws a direct line from those early interests to her belief in various conspiracy theories later in life.

“Looking back, I realise that those [mysteries] are soft entry points,” she says.

But there were other factors that made her vulnerable to disinformation as an adult.

In 2004, she had moved away from her friendship networks to live in a new city. Her mother had just died and she’d recently separated from her husband.

Plus, for the first time in her life, she had access to high-speed internet.

It wasn’t long before it had taken her to some very dark places.

She likens her descent into a conspiracy rabbit hole to drug addiction.

“I felt this rush of dopamine. I was feeling special, I was feeling warm and fuzzy,” she says.

There was a thrill in believing she knew something others didn’t; in having a mystery’s solution at arm’s reach. She found herself chasing the feeling more and more.

“The conspiracy theories were working for me just like [drugs do for] a heroin addict or a meth addict. You need a bigger and bigger dose as you form your tolerance. And I remember actively looking [and thinking], ‘What’s the next conspiracy I can get into?'”

A heartbreaking realisation

Like Stephanie, UK-based Brent Lee is also a former conspiracy theorist.

A man with shoulder-length hair stands with arms folded across chest and neutral expression, staring off to the side.

Brent Lee is a UK-based former conspiracy theorist, and co-host of the podcast Some Dare Call it a Conspiracy.(Supplied)

For 15 years he was a hardcore believer of conspiracies, including that “a network of secret societies and cults were actually controlling events around the world”.

“[I believed] terror attacks or mass shootings were done ritualistically and there were some sort of magic ceremonies to put a black magic spell on the populace so that we couldn’t see through the facade,” he tells ABC RN’s All in the Mind.

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