Putin’s succession strategy could be risky. This explains why.
Even the best-laid plans have unpredictable political consequences. For example, while Putin has proposed a legally unnecessary referendum to approve his proposed amendments, such an attempt to reestablish his popular legitimacy could just as easily become a focal point for opposition protests. Above all, if the Kremlin falls short on generating the economic growth and improvement in living standards that traditionally underpinned its political legitimacy, Russia may find that no succession strategy will be able to preserve the regime.
A decades-old mystery surrounding the death of nine skiers has spawned a raft of explanations, each more outlandish than the last.
The Russian Conspiracy That Won ’ t Die . This line of reasoning makes the charge that Trump is an agent of Russia essentially unfalsifiable, a classic characteristic of a conspiracy theory .
© Getty File Precisely 61 years ago, a band of skiers trekking through the Ural Mountains stashed food, extra skis, and a well-worn mandolin in a valley to pick up on the way back from their expedition.
In a moment of lightheartedness, one drew up a fake newspaper with headlines about their trip: “According to the latest information, abominable snowmen live in the northern Urals.”
Their excess equipment stored away, the group began moving toward the slope of Peak 1079, known among the region’s indigenous people as “Dead Mountain.” A photograph showed the lead skiers disappearing into sheets of whipping snow as the weather worsened.
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wanted: Must believe all conspiracy theories about Russia , hate Putin & ignore facts. relations the Russian Federation enjoys with many countries in the world, and so on and so forth. His 1976 book ' The Russians ' broke new ground in going beyond stories of a totalitarian Soviet Union and in
The conspiracy theory that Bill Gates is responsible for the coronavirus pandemic has been pushed on Russian state television, with the European Union Some 51% of Channel 1's shares are owned by representatives of the Russian state. Radio Free Europe reported that the segment, broadcast on
Later that night, the nine experienced trekkers burst out of their tent half-dressed and fled to their deaths in a blizzard. Some of their corpses were found with broken bones; one was missing her tongue. For decades, few people beyond the group’s friends and family were aware of the event. It only became known to the wider public in 1990, when a retired official’s account ignited a curiosity that soon metastasized.
© Provided by The Atlantic Today, the “Dyatlov Pass incident,” named after one of the students on the trek, Igor Dyatlov, has become Russia's biggest unsolved mystery, a font of endless conspiracy theories. Aliens, government agents, “Arctic dwarves”—and yes, even abominable snowmen—have at various points been blamed for the deaths. One state-television show regularly puts self-appointed experts through a theatrical lie-detector test to check their outlandish explanations.
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Conspiracy theories implicating the UK and its allies in the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal have been widely shared in order - adherents claim Former FSB chief Nikolai Kovalyov, a Russian MP, suggested on Tuesday Ukraine could be involved. Tensions between Russia and Ukraine have been
There are urban myths and conspiracy theories everywhere, but Russia ’s secretive Soviet past Amid the Russian Revolution, the Romanovs faced the firing squad in July 1918, where their executors supposedly killed them, ending Russia ’s royal lineage. He died three months after the sighting.
A year ago, the Russian prosecutor general's office announced a new inquiry into the deaths, to stop what it called the “growth of rumors” and to “establish the truth.” Investigators traveled to the area to reenact parts of the incident and are expected to announce their conclusions soon.
But if the Dyatlov Pass incident has shown anything, it's that closure will be elusive. Even a definitive judgment is unlikely to quell speculation: In Russia, conspiracy theories are an essential part of daily life.
“It's our Soviet mystery that we want to solve,” Natalya Barsegova, who has been publishing articles on the case for the newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda since 2012, told me. “Every person who starts researching it thinks he's the one who can solve it, but the deeper he goes, the more the swamp sucks him in.”
© KRIVONISCHENKO'S CAMERA / ARSH RAZIUDDIN / THE ATLANTIC An unsolved mystery such as the Dyatlov Pass incident would no doubt rile up truthers in the United States, but the Russian obsession with the incident is above and beyond American internet-forum debates on Area 51 and the chupacabra. Whereas U.S. conspiracy theories often develop on the fringes of public life—a line that has admittedly been blurred in the Donald Trump era—conspiracy-mongering is mainstream in Russia, a country in which 57 percent of the population believes the Apollo moon landings were a hoax.
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Russia has been accused by the US of spreading conspiracy theories that coronavirus is a biological weapon created by the CIA, and now the UK The UK government has created a special unit designed to combat Russian disinformation about the novel coronavirus after the US accused Moscow of
But sound or not, his theory of the Trump Russia scandal has won thousands of devotees and appears to be breaking into the mainstream. That said, he acknowledged his explanation for the Trump campaign’s many ties to Russia is as dramatic as possible: that the president of the United
And while this belief in secret plots typically begins at the grassroots level in the U.S., in Russia it has more often come from the top down. In the late 1800s, the tsarist state began encouraging conspiracy theories targeting Jews and Catholics as a way to rally Russians against the West. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a fake document cited as evidence of Jewish plans for global domination by Adolf Hitler, was first published in Russia in 1903 at the height of the pogroms.
In the Soviet era, officials regularly found conspiracies of capitalist spies and counter-revolutionaries, killing and imprisoning millions for such imagined offenses during Stalin's Great Terror. Manufactured suspicions were directed outward as well: When Moscow accidentally shot down Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in 1983, it claimed that the plane was part of a U.S. plot to start a war. The denunciations of neighbors and widespread state surveillance, the cover-ups and deceit, led to paranoia among the citizenry. People had to read between the lines of party mouthpieces to get any sense of what was really going on. As a result, the columnist Oleg Kashin has argued, many still feel today that something “was hidden behind the black-and-white photographs” of the Dyatlov expedition.
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That habit of piecing together one’s own explanation has persisted after the collapse of the Soviet Union, compounded by a deep-rooted cynicism and the Kremlin’s own propaganda. The government of Vladimir Putin—who once claimed that the internet was a “CIA project”—routinely suggests that Western plots are behind everything from Russia’s Olympic doping ban to Syria’s White Helmet volunteers. Online troll farms, pro-Kremlin pundits, and sensationalist state news outlets like Sputnik and RT pitch in too: One state-television host’s insinuating catchphrase—“Coincidence? I don’t think so”—has become an internet meme.
Obfuscation is the default reaction to any accusation. When Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 was blown apart over eastern Ukraine by a Russian missile in 2014, the defense ministry in Moscow argued that it could have been shot down in a false-flag operation. When the poisoning of Sergei Skripal was tied to Russian agents, the foreign ministry hinted that a British laboratory was the real culprit. Most recently, parliamentarians have claimed that last summer’s protests in Moscow were orchestrated by Washington. Truth is seen as relative, and conspiracy has become the coin of the realm.
Here’s what we know about the Dyatlov Pass incident: The nine skiers, all college students, had set out from Yekaterinburg, then known by its communist name, Sverdlovsk, in January 1959, singing songs on an overnight train. They planned to ski about 200 miles over 16 days, summiting several peaks along the way, allowing enough time to be back for the spring semester. After catching a lift with some lumberjacks and following a sleigh driver north, the group skied out of an abandoned village on January 28, eventually making it to their final campsite on February 1.
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Searchers later found their tracks along a frozen river, and, upon reaching Dead Mountain, stumbled across a half-collapsed tent on a steep, windswept slope. Inside, food supplies and outer clothing were laid out, as if the group had been about to cook dinner. Nine pairs of boots stood along one wall. Bizarrely, the tent appeared to have been slashed open—from within.
RELATED: The truth is out there - biggest conspiracy theories
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A conspiracy theory is usually defined as a belief that the official, or widely accepted version of a circumstance or event, is not the real one, and that the truth is being hidden by those responsible — usually a shadowy person or an organization intent on furthering their own ends.
Some of these theories have been around for centuries, but in the age of the internet and mass communication, they are much more easily spread and maintained. Here, we take a look at a few of the most famous. Microsoft and MSN are not implying any endorsement of the versions of events they contain.
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9/11
Polls have suggested millions of people believe the destruction of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, were staged or executed not by Al-Qaeda, but by the U.S. Government. Some campaigners have devoted their lives to uncovering what they say is the truth.
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9/11
Among the theories that have gained traction are that the towers were destroyed in a controlled demolition, and that the plane that crashed into the Pentagon did not do so, but rather the damage was done by a missile, or another sort of plane.
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John F. Kennedy's Assasination
Many theories exist to explain the assassination of the popular U.S. president in Dallas, Texas, U.S., in 1963. Lee Harvey Oswald, the man arrested for the crime, was himself shot and killed two days later.
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John F. Kennedy's Assasination
Some say the CIA were behind the hit, with commanders anxious about its future in the wake of the president's alleged comment that he wanted to "splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds". Others insist the mafia organized and carried out the murder after the president's administration cracked down on their operations.
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Vaccination
Vaccines, or mass inoculations against disease, have attracted suspicion from conspiracy theorists, who say they are a front for the introduction of other agents into the body.
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Vaccination
Some say that they are used by the government to implant tracking devices, others that they are a way to sterilize poor people and thus keep the global population down.
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Knight Templar
The Poor Knights of the Temple of King Solomon were a military/religious order founded around the year 1119 to protect Christian pilgrims journeying to the Holy Land.
Legend has it that there were only nine of them at the start, but they rose to have great wealth, power and influence across Europe before being suddenly disbanded by Philip IV of France on Friday 13, 1307, with members tortured and put to death. (Pictured) Knight Templar in his war costume and his squire. Reign of Louis IX. In 1255. Colored engraving.
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Knight Templar
Many legends abound, chief among them that the Knights discovered 'proof' Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene and had children with her, only for these 'facts' to be later suppressed. Dan Brown alluded to parts of the myth in his global bestseller "The Da Vinci Code." (Pictured) A photograph shows an engraving circa 1150 of the Templars' battle in Jerusalem displayed at the headquarters of the religious military order known as Knights Templar or Knights of the Temple on Nov. 30, 2005, in Rome, Italy.
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Illuminati
The Illuminati are — according to those who believe the theory — a mysterious elite group that uses the media to manipulate the masses and is intent on global domination.
The original Illuminati was a group founded in 18th-century Germany by a professor who wanted to form a secret society of well-educated and powerful people. They were discovered and disbanded, but they have existed in the shadows ever since, according to myth. (Pictured) Symbol of the The Bavarian Illuminati secret society (1776-1785).
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Illuminati
Symbols most associated with the Illuminati include triangles, pentagrams, goats, the all-seeing eye — such as the one that appears on US banknotes — and the number 666.
Beyoncé and husband Jay-Z are often cited as members by conspiracy theorists — their immense popularity and interpretations of (among other things) Beyoncé’s 'triangle' hand gestures cited as factors. Beyoncé’s half-time performance at the Superbowl (pictured) was particularly cited by Illuminati-watchers as containing lots of symbolism and mind control techniques. Both stars have rebuffed the claims in lyrics to their songs.
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Giant Lizard Rulers
Former footballer and TV presenter David Icke claims the world's leaders are actually super-intelligent twelve-foot alien lizards disguised as humans who control our reality from the moon and indulge in child sacrifice and pedophilia.
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Giant Lizard Rulers
Among this group Icke puts the likes of George W Bush, Ted Heath, the Rothschild family, the Queen of England, her husband and mother and Kris Kristofferson. Icke now has a global following and has performed a stage show at venues around the world to thousands of people.
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Moon Landing
Thirty years after the moon landings, a poll reported in Time magazine showed that some 6% of Americans believed that Neil Armstrong's great leap for mankind was faked, with another 5% undecided.
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Moon Landing
'Evidence' that the U.S. government staged them (some say with the assistance of legendary director Stanley Kubrick, an accusation vehemently denied by his family) include the fact that the flag planted on the moon 'flapped' despite the fact there couldn't be any wind in the vacuum of space. (NASA says it was caused by motion of the flagpole, and the fact there is a pole along the top to support it).
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Chemtrails
The skies over most of the world are routinely crisscrossed with white lines left behind by jets — trails of condensation, known as 'contrails'. But some believe that they are something much more sinister — 'chemtrails', or chemicals deliberately sprayed into the air.
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Chemtrails
Theories about what these chemicals may contain range from drugs to keep the people on the ground compliant to airborne agents that affect the weather and even attempt to control the climate. The Chemtrails theory is reportedly one of the most widely supported on Earth, with millions of adherents. (Pictured) A man demonstrates against 'Chemtrails' in a protester encampment in Watford, England, on June 6, 2013.
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Flouride in Drinking Water
Flouride has been added to public water supplies in countries around the world for decades. According to the public health organizations responsible, the purpose is to strengthen the teeth of the populations concerned, and prevent people suffering from painful cavities. (Pictured) Gerry Keoghan protesting about Flouride in drinking water outside Leinster House in Dublin on Nov. 25, 2011.
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Flouride in Drinking Water
However, people around the world have long objected to flouridation of water. Some don't like the fact it doesn't give the drinker any choice in whether they want it or not. Others go further and say — as with chemtrails and vaccinations — that it is a method of controlling the population by keeping them docile and numbing parts of the brain that would cause them to question things. In particular, they say it suppresses the action of the pineal gland, a 'third eye' that allows humans to think creatively, and even transport themselves to other realities.
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Area 51
Area 51 is a U.S. airbase in the Nevada desert where, according to some, alien spacecraft are kept by the military in the hope of copying their technology. (Pictured) A road sign near the U.S. military base, Area 51.
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Area 51
The fact that the base was fiercely guarded and its existence comprehensively denied for decades only added fuel to the fires, but the official version of events is that it does indeed exist, but was used to test cutting-edge planes and weapon technology during the Cold War … some of which flew at Mach 3 and would have looked like flying saucers to anyone who saw them. (Pictured) Part of Area 51.
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Bermuda Triangle
The Bermuda Triangle is an area between Bermuda, Florida and Puerto Rico where ships and planes are said to disappear without any trace or explanation.
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Bermuda Triangle
Theories behind this include a rift in space-time, a hidden colony of aliens or the presence of the lost city of Atlantis below the waves sucking passing craft down beneath them. However, critics argue that in fact the rate of disappearance is no greater than elsewhere on the oceans. (Pictured) The brigantine, Mary Celeste, in a cyclone in the Bermuda in 1872.
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Bilderberg Group
The Bilderberg group is an annual meeting of 'elite intellectuals' from across the world to discuss — well, no-one really knows. No minutes are published of the meetings, which take place behind closed doors amid tight security.
The group has been accused of everything from plotting the rise and fall of world leaders to trying to form a New World Order, made up of the top figures in banks, corporations and countries — a claim former British Labour politician Denis Healey, who helped found the group, did not entirely deny when asked about it.
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Bilderberg Group
In 2000, he told the Guardian: "To say we were striving for a one-world government is exaggerated, but not wholly unfair. Those of us in Bilderberg felt we couldn’t go on forever fighting one another for nothing and killing people and rendering millions homeless. So we felt that a single community throughout the world would be a good thing." (Pictured) A soldier of the Austrian army stands next to a mobile radar station that is safeguarding the upcoming Bilderberg conference on June 9, 2015, near Telfs, Austria.
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In the forest below, the investigators came across two bodies under a cedar tree, lying next to the remains of a fire. Although the temperature had been down to -40 degrees Fahrenheit the night the group disappeared, the pair were wearing only long underwear. Fragments of human skin on the tree revealed that they had broken off branches. The bodies of Dyatlov and two others, also without shoes and coats, were found several hundred feet away. It wasn't until the snow began to thaw two months later that the remaining four corpses were found. Two had broken ribs, and one's skull was partially crushed.
The inquiry, carried out in spring 1959, left many questions unresolved. Why did the skiers flee the tent to certain death in the wind and snow? What caused the blunt-force traumas? Why did an analysis find elevated levels of radioactivity on two of the victims' clothing? These questions were all beyond the purview of the official investigators, who, while baffled, concluded that there had been no foul play, and that the students were killed by an “elemental force that the tourists were not able to overcome.” The case was closed, and the findings were archived as “secret,” as was routine in the Soviet Union at the time.
A local journalist was barred from filing a report on the incident, and for decades the only publication related to the mystery was a novel by one of the searchers. (It had a slightly happier ending: After hurricane-force winds blow one girl down the slope and trap the others who rush to help her, the group leader attempts to return to the tent and dies. The rest find shelter in a trapper's hut.) But then came the Soviet breakup, which lifted the curtain of silence over the traumatic past. The extent of Stalin's repressions was revealed to the public, as was the existence of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Impoverished by financial collapse, and shocked that much of what they had been taught since childhood was a lie, many Russians were cast emotionally adrift. Faith healing, cults, and pyramid schemes flourished.
RELATED: History's greatest unsolved mysteries
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Bermuda Triangle
Over the last 500 years, ships and airplanes have gone missing inside a triangular section of the North Atlantic Ocean called the Bermuda (or Devil's) Triangle. This mysterious area is bounded by the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda; Miama, Florida, U.S.; and the American territory of Puerto Rico.
The earliest article to reference a disappearance was in The Miami Herald in 1950. However, the "Bermuda Triangle" itself was coined by Vincent Gaddis in a 1964 article.
Since then, scientists and amateurs have floated various theories - from sea monsters to unidentified flying objects (UFOs) - but nobody has been successful in decoding the mystery. In August 2018, a Channel 5 documentary - “The Bermuda Triangle Enigma” - suggested the disappearances could be attributed to 100 feet (30 meter) tall "rogue" waves that engulf ships and planes attempting to navigate the area.
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Mary Celeste
The American merchant brigantine was found adrift, without its crew, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean on Dec. 4, 1872. Her only lifeboat was missing but the ship itself was in perfect condition and amply provisioned. The Mary Celeste set sail from New York City, New York, U.S. on Nov. 7, 1872, with seven crewmen and the captain, as well as his wife and their two-year-old daughter. None of them were ever seen again, according to the Smithsonian magazine. Theories about what happened include waterspouts, attacks by deep sea creatures, pirates and even a mutiny, but none has ever been proven.
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Voynich manuscript
The Voynich manuscript is a cryptic 15th century text written in an unknown or coded language. It is a mix of elegant writing, drawings of strange plants and nude portraits, all of which has interested several researchers, cryptographers and linguists. Unfortunately, no one, so far, has been able to read the book. It is named after Wilfred M. Voynich, a rare-book dealer who procured the document from the Jesuit order in 1912. In 2016, a small Spanish company called Siloe won the right to produce exact replicas of the manuscript so it is accessible to more people.
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The lost colony of Roanoke
The island of Roanoke, situated off the coast of present-day North Carolina, U.S., was established in 1585 by English settlers. The new settlement’s governor, John White, left for England to procure more supplies, leaving behind his wife, daughter, son-in-law and grand-daughter; the latter, Virginia Dare, is believed to be the first English child born in the Americas.
When White returned in 1590, he found an abandoned colony, with the word “Croatoan” carved on a post. One of the more popular theories is the occupants of the settlement fled to a nearby island, where they assimilated with a Native American tribe of the same name.
(Pictured) The baptism of Virginia Dare.
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Mohenjo Daro
A UNESCO World Heritage Site, this ancient civilization emerged some 4,500 years ago, thriving along the fertile plains of the Indus River until it mysteriously collapsed. The city of Mohenjo Daro was unknown till 1911, when archaeologists first visited; excavations didn’t start till 1921. Known for advanced drainage systems and a grid-style construction, the fate of the people and the civilization remains unknown. Theories to explain that fate include a sudden change in the course of the river to an attack by invaders wielding advanced weaponry.
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Stonehenge
Stonehenge, the prehistoric monument that took Neolithic builders an estimated 30 million hours to erect, comprises massive upright stones—mainly bluestone and sarsen. Located in southern England, it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. While some scientists have suggested that glaciers or moving ice floes, not humans, did most of the heavy lifting during one of the Ice Ages, the purpose of the structure remains a mystery.
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The Late Bronze Age collapse
Around 1200 BC, the entire Eastern Mediterranean, Anatolia and Aegean region collapsed in a sudden, violent and disruptive manner. Almost all the cities were destroyed, and the cultural collapse of the kingdoms brought about the Dark Ages. Historians believe it might have been due to foreign invasion, drop in international trade or natural causes like earthquake and/or drought.
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Jack the Ripper
In 1888, between August and November, at least five prostitutes were mutilated and murdered in the East End of London, England. The “Whitechapel murders,” as the crimes came to be known (because of the area they were committed in), gave rise to the mystery of Jack the Ripper. The name originates from an anonymous letter sent to a London news agency confessing to the crimes and signed Jack the Ripper. It was later found to be bogus. Nearly 13 decades since the crime, speculation surrounding the identity of the killer has not died down and the identity of the elusive serial killer continues to fascinate.
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William Shakespeare
The “authorship question” of the English bard — who wrote such renowned plays as “The Merchant of Venice,” “Julius Caesar” and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” — continues to haunt scholars with many trying to figure out how a glover’s son from the countryside entered the literary world. Popular conspiracy theories suggest he was a ghostwriter or actually Francis Bacon, an essayist; Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford or even Christopher Marlowe, another playwright from the same era.
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Shroud of Turin
The Shroud of Turin – a piece of linen cloth bearing the image of a man – is believed to be Jesus of Nazareth’s burial shroud. The artifact is kept in the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist in Turin, Italy.
Over the years, several scientists have studied the cloth, subjecting it to a range of tests, including DNA studies. One such study, published in July 2018, claimed the bloodstain patterns were unrealistic and, therefore, the shroud was a fake. Nevertheless, the piece of cloth remains a religious icon with considerable mythological and spiritual power.
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Antikythera mechanism
An ancient computer-like device believed to have been made by Greek scientists sometime between 150 B.C. and 100 B.C., this object was found in the wreckage of a 2,000-year-old ship off the coast of the Greek island of Antikythera.
In 1959, Derek J. de Solla Price, a science historian at Princeton University, New Jersey, U.S., found the device could be used to predict astronomical positions and even eclipses. The mysterious part about all this is that the technology to produce such objects was not seen again till the 14th century, when mechanical clocks were being made in Europe. Price wrote: “Nothing comparable to it is known from any scientific text or literary allusion.”
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Area 51
Area 51 is a remote U.S. Air Force facility in the state of Nevada. According to conspiracy theorists and UFO folklore, it is believed to be the storage site of an alien vehicle that crashed on earth. There are also rumors of underground military facilities researching alien technology.
However, in 2015, former NASA administrator Charles Bolden, said: “I never saw any aliens or alien spacecraft or anything when I was there [Area 51]. I think because of the secrecy of the aeronautics research that goes on there, it’s ripe for people to talk about aliens being there.”
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Amelia Earhart
The first American woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, Earhart set several other records in the course of her life. She also published books about her flying experiences.
In 1937, in the middle of an attempt to fly around the world, her plane mysteriously disappeared over the central Pacific Ocean. It is believed Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, flew into overcast skies and rain showers that may have resulted in her aircraft crashing. Since then, there have been several theories attempting to explain her disappearance and reveal her fate, but none have been universally accepted.
In March 2018, Professor Richard Jantz from the University of Tennessee, published an article that said bones found on a Pacific Ocean island in 1940 could those of Earhart. He wrote: “Until definitive evidence is presented that the remains are not those of Amelia Earhart, the most convincing argument is that they are hers.”
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King Arthur
Was there really a King Arthur and was he really given Excalibur to unite and rule the British people? The jury is out on that score, but several pieces of Romance literature draw on the Arthurian legend, the Knights of the Round Table and the mysterious magician by his side, Merlin.
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Dancing Plague
In July 1518, a woman in Strasbourg (then part of the Holy Roman Empire) suddenly took to dancing on a city street. She was soon joined by others, all dancing uncontrollably. Within a month, 400 people were dancing in the city and would not stop; many died from exhaustion. Several reasons have been given for the phenomenon, termed the Dancing Plague of 1518, such as mass hysteria or an act to please divine powers but none stands conclusive.
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Loch Ness monster
According to legends, the Loch Ness monster is a mythical aquatic creature found in Scotland. Some suggest it is a large animal that represents a line of dinosaurs. A 1934 image, believed to be the first photographic evidence of the creature, was found to be a fake in 1994. In 2008, late researcher Robert Rines suggested “Nessie” may have become extinct because of global warming. In recent times, scientists are in talks to use environmental DNA to establish the existence of the Loch Ness monster.
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Onto this ripe ground fell the seed of the Dyatlov mystery. In January 1990, the former Communist Party head of a town near the Dyatlov Pass wrote a response to a newspaper article about a supposed UFO sighting in the area. In it, he described what had happened to the skiers, claiming that holes in their tent were made by falling debris from a rocket test. The paper later published a story in which Lev Ivanov, the lead investigator on the 1959 Dyatlov inquiry, was quoted as saying the students were killed by a UFO. The article also repeated rumors that the group could have been killed by indigenous people or radiation from a weapons test. (In fact, the “balls of fire” referred to in the story had been seen weeks after the students’ deaths and were attributable to documented missile tests.) A few months later, Ivanov wrote his own article in another newspaper blaming the students' injuries on a “heat ray or a strong energy that is completely unknown to us.” With UFOs, secret documents, and hints of a government cover-up—“Khrushchev was informed about the event at the very beginning,” Ivanov wrote—the articles were a conspiracy-theory starter kit. By the late 2000s, “Dyatlophrenia” had made it to national newspapers and television.
An ever-growing web of theories has since emerged, claiming that poisoned alcohol, the descendants of ancient “Aryans,” or a variety of fantastical weapons like a “vacuum bomb” were responsible. The fact that the deputy engineer of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant had the same surname as Igor Dyatlov raised suspicions of some connection to that disaster. Several theories hold that the Dyatlov group included a KGB or CIA agent.
Even those closest to the tragedy have blamed the deaths on some nefarious plot. Yuri Yudin, a student who briefly accompanied the group before turning back due to illness, said before his death that he believed his friends “saw something they shouldn't have seen” and were forced at gunpoint to fabricate a scene to confuse investigators, then left to die.
When I spoke to Yuri Kuntsevich, who attended the students' funerals as a boy and has since become an oft-quoted researcher and head of the Dyatlov Memorial Fund, I was hoping for a clear-eyed assessment to cut through the noise. Instead, he argued that the students had been asked by a Western agent named “the Mole” to photograph a secret missile test. After doing so, they were murdered by drunken convicts guarding the pass. “Then they moved the tent 1.5 kilometers to an impractical place. That was done by a mop-up team [of soldiers]; they had several helicopters,” he told me matter-of-factly.
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Dyatlov’s own sister, Tatyana Perminova, told me she had heard a raft of theories, but could only repeat what her parents had told her at the time of her brother’s disappearance and death. “They were sure,” she said, “that the military was somehow involved.”
So what really did happen the night of February 1, 1959? The theory put forward by the American researcher Donnie Eichar, as well as by some Russian scientists, is that severe winds blowing over the dome of the mountain created a “Kármán vortex street” of whirlwinds, which produced a low-frequency sound that is not entirely audible but vibrates hair cells in the ear, causing nausea and intense psychological discomfort. Under that onslaught in the pitch dark, the students could have been overcome by feelings of fear and panic.
When announcing its inquiry last year, the Russian prosecutor general ruled out “criminal” explanations and said it was focusing on three natural causes—an avalanche, a snow slab, or a hurricane. That has done little to keep the rumor machine from kicking into high gear. For months, fantastic new theories emerged on websites and TV shows, while Kuntsevich and relatives of some of the Dyatlov group, angry at prosecutors’ refusal to consider non-natural causes for the deaths, have filed a complaint asking investigators to open a criminal case.
That’s the difficulty with conspiracy theories in Russia and elsewhere: Even if the real explanation is found, not everyone will believe it. The mystery of the Dyatlov Pass incident may one day be solved, but it will never truly be put to rest.
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