Mike Cronk was sitting half-naked on a street corner, hands covered in blood, when the TV news reporter approached. The 48-year-old, who had used his shirt to try to plug a bullet wound in his friend’s chest, recounted in a live interview how a young man he did not know had just died in his arms.
Cronk’s story of surviving the worst mass shooting in modern US history went viral, but many people online weren’t calling him a hero. On YouTube, dozens of videos, viewed by hundreds of thousands of people, claimed Cronk was an actor hired to play the part of a victim in the Las Vegas mass shooting on 1 October.
Conspiracy theorists harassed him on Facebook, sending messages like “How much did they pay you?” and “How does it feel to be part of a hoax?” The claims multiplied and soon YouTube’s algorithm began actively promoting the conspiracy theory.
Two months later, Cronk’s online reputation […]
I definitely think there has been some highly suspicious anomalies in some of the mass shootings and purported terrorism incidents..however, not respecting victims in any circumstances is completely unacceptable and a new low. Questioning the overall facts should and must be done, since our police and government have proven not to be trustworthy at times, but never at the expense of re-traumatizing people who have been injured. Cautionary principle must be applied.
That event was very likely a well planned conspiracy. Yet a conspiracy doesn’t mean that actors would have to be used. There are conspiracies with fake victims, but here all victims were real. Events where actors were used pretty much for sure are Orlando and Sandy Hooks. However, that doesn’t mean that there wasn’t one or two real deaths to make the thing (Orlando and Sandy Hooks) more believable (or confusing).
After all it is not a big deal for governments to kill people. They don’t have good experience with faking deaths (Orlando was too obvious), so I think they won’t take the faking approach anymore (or not often).
Faking deaths is not at all a general tendency in false flag attacks.
I see no evidence that any of these events were a false flag conspiracy, and a great deal of evidence that they were not. I am letting you post this to show that the idea of these murder events being conspiracies is remarkably common, in spite of all evidence to the contrary. — Stephan