At this point I’m willing to hear out any so called “conspiracy theory”. Even the crazy ones don’t seem as crazy as they did before.
A decade ago I thought there was little chance the CIA killed JFK but now I’m pretty sure they did. The idea that powerful elites got together and sexually assaulted kids was also pretty “out there” but now appears to be true.
While i don’t think they’re currently microchipping vaccines it’d be foolish to think that with nanotechnology this isn’t on the table in the future:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43586-023-00246-7
An open mind is good, but as the saying goes, not so open your brain falls out.
Many things are conceivably possible. Warp drives even time travel, the question is A: are they possible now and B: are they probable.
The kind of nano tech we are capable of currently is so simple it can barely be called so. Even as tech progresses in the future people always forget that reality is an ultra complex system, especially body function.
Most medicines that are developed show great results in vitro for example but once they test them in vivo they do not work as the body with all its functions is insanely complex.
There are just so many variables at play. That makes something like remote activated nano chips in vaccines more of a pipe dream but it is also why I am cautious of MRNA vaccines. The complexity of human biology means there are hundreds of ways it could potentially go wrong due to thousands of variables, most of which have not been tested for and the effects of which may take decades to present.
The other factor for filtering bonkers conspiracy theories from potentially genuine ones is practicality. If the idea requires super expensive, scifi tech to be deployed (not to mention for powers involved to be super competent) and for tens of thousands of independent researchers (not to mention enemy nations) to stay quiet and not blow the whistle it probably isn't true. The idea that Covid doesn't actually exist was a good example of that. It definitely exists. However on other hand if a conspiracy involves people just covering their own ***** and there are people who speak up it is more likely to be true, like Fauci moving banned GOF research to China and funding it knowing the dangers and attempting to cover up the connection to and origin of a pandemic.Self interest and easiest methods to that are the usual drivers of all human behavior and like the average mid level manager we all know most politicians are just as fallible and incompetent as anyone else, they simply have access to means most don't.
Most of the time (not every time) Hanlon's razor applies (it is usually incompetence rather than malice). This applies to how, for example, politicians implemented lockdowns at the beginning. They didn't understand how viruses spread due to being scientifically illiterate and so looked at what China was doing for ideas. They didn't know which experts were actually experts (again due to scientific illiteracy) and used what they know (political plays) to choose who to listen to rather than base decisions on evidence. They picked the easiest one size fits all solution whether it was actually backed by science or not and implemented it far too late to be effective. This only turned into malice once they realized they could achieve other political targets they wanted using the situation as an excuse. An example of such malice would be UK gov moving Covid patients into elderly care homes knowing full well that Covid would then spread like wildfire through the vulnerable residents thus killing off a net drain "accidentally".
The other rule to apply is Occam's razor: the simplest explanation (the one that does not require bending of physics/ massive conspiracies where millions do not let slip the secret/ super secret scifi tech etc) is most likely the correct one. That is what makes "Epstein didn't Kill himself" plausible, the number of coincidences needed for it to truly be suicide are many. It is what makes 5G activated nanotech delivered in vaccines to depopulate the world completely implausible