Yes. We are on the bed.
You could call it an homage
to old YouTube.
I call it...
comfortable for my butt.
Conspiracy theories.
So as somebody who's lost many a night
tumbling down Wikipedia
rabbit holes,
I love a good conspiracy theory.
It's like, "Ooh, aliens!"
"Ooh, how do people make
such big triangles?"
I think that that it's just fun
imagining the world
to be more interesting
than what I was taught.
But then something weird happened?
A couple weeks ago,
I found myself
in the middle of
a conspiracy theory.
And then, all of the fun
was replaced with just...
pure confusion.
The conspiracy itself is, like,
weird and fun and innocuous.
However, what I really
cared about is, like,
how do you get to that point?
How do you start seeing signs
that were never there to begin with.
That's what I want to know.
And I also want to, like, disprove
this whole conspiracy theory
'cause it's whack.
However, as the person
in the middle of all of this,
I can imagine why I'd be
seen as unreliable.
So...
...I'm calling on a friend!
Uhh, I don't know how to put this.
How do you put this?
People think that I am
part of the Illuminati.
Uh-
Well, are you?
[laughs]
This is just one of the comments,
but I think it really
summarizes the issue.
"I find this channel to
be highly disingenuous-"
"-Corporate product masked
to have the appearance of
an independently run YouTube channel."
"There's no way a single person is that skilled
at animation, editing, presenting, research-"
"Everything is too professional for that-"
"There's no way this girl
is the one who did this"
"A production company put this video
together with you just as a host."
So now- Now...
Now what?
Why am I calling you? Right?
Yeah. I'm, like, "How do you
want me to prove this?
I am wondering if you could explain
to me and the viewers of this video,
how could somebody see
something so mundane
that's just, like, a part
of my life, I guess.
How could someone see that
and think, like, "There must be more."
I'm interested. I'm fascinated.
'Cause I'm, like...
I'm not only interested in your
conspiracy, as interesting as it is.
I think conspiracies have a
knack for, especially nowadays,
to just....
just ruin people's lives,
you know?
I'm gonna solve this mystery.
♪ Scooby-dooby-doo ♪
We don't have the copyright on that.
We're going to investigate
this conundrum. I'm-I'm-
You're doubling down on it, I see.
Hello, I'm Taha.
I'm apparently Sabrina's
only British friend.
I've been given free reign
over this part of the video,
so, welcome to my chaos.
Sabrina's asked me to get into
the mind of a Sabrina Cruz truther
and figure out what's going on.
Okay, hold on.
It needs pictures.
Let's read some conspiracy theories.
"This is a fake channel
A propaganda channel paid by others.
Why the spotty uploads?"
Maybe because it's-
it's just one person?
I love this one.
"Who do you work for?
We all know this isn't your channel.
Whose script are you reading?"
"I think she works for the government."
Oh. This is the best one.
"Her main channel is crash course
with 10 million subs."
John and Hank Green,
eat your heart out.
Okay, so basically,
people think that Sabrina
doesn't make her own videos,
that she's a presenter,
that maybe she works for the government.
How did people get here?
Let's figure it out.
Okay. So, here's what I found out.
There are loads of ways to define
conspiracy theories,
but they all kind of boil down
to the same thing.
It's basically the belief that
a group of people
are secretly working together
to do something bad.
But here's the thing:
When we talk about conspiracy theories,
we aren't talking about every time
anyone has ever got together
to secretly do bad things.
So what are people talking about
when they say "conspiracy theory"?
Or when they talk about conspiracy
theories on the internet?
They talk about a specific type
of conspiracy theory.
It's the type of conspiracy theory that
Sabrina is in the middle of right now.
These conspiracy theories
seem to be unlikely by design.
Here's the really interesting thing that I found.
These theories have pretty distinctive
features that you can spot
and these features make them
not only unlikely to be true
but also difficult to argue against.
These features are that
they are speculative,
based on educated or
not-so-educated guesswork
rather than solid evidence.
The rationale being that
if a conspiracy was successful
then it wouldn't have left a trace.
They can become contrarian.
They form in opposition to the
obvious or official explanation.
Conspiracy theories will dismiss
this explanation, citing
"That's what they want you to think."
Because of this, theories
can become esoteric.
If the obvious explanation isn't true,
then the theory is based on speculation.
The conspiracy theory can run wild.
Explanations can become increasingly
detached from reality.
Theories are also amateurish.
Now, that isn't a comment on
a theorist's intelligence.
That's a comment on how qualified
these theorists are.
In most cases, they don't have
the relevant expertise
to be conclusively analyzing evidence.
Even when they do,
they're in the small minority
and the professional consensus
doesn't agree with them.
And is it more likely that
all experts are lying
or that most informed and qualified people
are coming to the same conclusion.
Conspiracies can also become premodern.
These conspiracies believe that
incredibly complex events
can be controlled by a small number
of people acting in secret.
Nothing is a coincidence
or a series of uncorrelated events,
but a coordinated conspiracy.
And lastly, these conspiracies
are self-sealing.
What this means is that
the conspiracy is difficult
to argue against.
If a conspiracy is based on speculation,
it dismisses the obvious explanation
in favor of a more obscure one.
if it ignores expert consensus
and believes that a small group of people
can control complex events,
any explanation against the conspiracy
is just what they want you to think.
Now, that doesn't mean that every time
you hear the words "conspiracy theory"
you should just dismiss it.
Because we know that throughout history,
there are well-documented conspiracies.
I find this really interesting concept
that distinguish between
conspiracy theory and conspiracy fact.
Essentially, when you have
a bunch of solid evidence
that supports the fact
that a conspiracy occurred,
you can consider it fact.
But it isn't sensible to believe
conspiracy theories,
the ones that tick all of the boxes
that make them unbelievable.
And not unbelievable in a way like,
"Oh, that's unbelievable!"
In a way that's like,
"I don't believe you."
And even if conspiracy theories
aren't true,
they still have a function.
Not a good function,
but still a function.
So, what is it?
People believe in conspiracies
that reinforce their
political or ideological bias.
Nobody's believing a conspiracy theory
that goes against what they think
the world is like.
We patterns and theories that
reinforce our ideology
and we're happy to get onboard.
In this way, conspiracy theories
are a type of ideological propaganda.
By spreading the theory, you also end up
spreading your world view.
In order to believe a theory,
you have to believe that
the world is a certain way.
So, by convincing people
of your conspiracy theory,
you are also implicitly convincing them
that the world is the way
that you believe it to be.
Okay. So, in the process of
researching this video,
I ended up going down a lot
of conspiracy theory rabbit holes.
Some of them I obviously know were untrue,
but others I thought,
"Maybe they could be true?"
That was kind of scary to me.
And I wanted to find out what it was
about conspiracy theories
that made them so... attractive.
And that's when I got into the
psychology of conspiracy theories.
There are 2 key psychological phenomenon
that drive a natural inclination
towards conspiracy theories.
First is "pattern perception".
We're bad at recognizing randomness.
Instead, we are more likely to see
a pattern when there is none.
And, secondly, is "agency detection".
We tend to think that events occur
due to agents acting intentionally,
rather than recognizing neutral
or accidental occurrences.
These 2 phenomena are compounded
by cognitive biases
that make conspiracy theories believable.
These include "proportionality bias",
which leads to thinking that
the cause of an event
has to be as big as its consequences.
When the explanation is not as grand
as the event itself,
people can find it difficult to believe.
This means we assume things happen
on purpose rather than by accident.
When the conspiracy explains
how something was intentional,
believing that it was an accident
becomes difficult.
"Confirmation bias" means that
once we believe a conspiracy,
we tend to only pay attention to
evidence that supports our conclusion.