Russell Brand Nails 'Conspiracy Theory' Term
"That term was invented to prevent people from asking questions and having a conversation about a pretty unique event."
"There's no conspiracy theory beyond that. There are of course, like with any subject, people that have views that are on a spectrum of extremity. But you can’t use that to de-legitimize the skepticism that accompanied a unique global event that was ... exploited to introduce regulations and legislation that would never have been accepted otherwise, normalize the idea of censorship, normalize the idea of mass compliance, create incredible profits for Pfizer and Moderna and other companies with some pretty interesting ties to very powerful figures in the U.S. government, and U.K. government, as well as creating a general climate of compliance and normalizing the control of a population."
"Now, I suppose it gets into conspiracy theory when you start to contemplate how that might be used or misused in the future, but it's no longer a conspiracy theory in the same sense that some unfounded and absurd proposition could be put forward without any evidence at all. That's not conspiracy theory. The idea of 'anti-vax rhetoric' now has to be paused and parked, like the AstraZeneca vaccine should have been, and if it had been, there'd be some people that are dead now, that would be alive."
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