User:Paigeforce/sandbox

A conspiracy theory may take any matter as its subject, but certain subjects attract greater interest than others. Favored subjects include famous deaths and assassinations, morally dubious government activities, suppressed technologies, and “false flag” terrorism. Among the longest-standing and most widely recognized conspiracy theories are notions concerning the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the death of Princess Diana, who Martin Luther King’s actual killer was, the 1969 Apollo moon landings, and the 9/11 terrorist attacks, as well as numerous theories pertaining to alleged plots for world domination by various groups both real and imaginary.

There are many conspiracy theories that change and develop over time. Some examples of these specific theories would be the Mandela Effect and Avril Lavigne being said to have committed suicide. One of the factors that cause these theories to change is the fact that experts and others who have researched certain theories in general created false memories within people that make them believe that what the theory states is how it has always been. For example, the Mandela Effect. The Mandela Effect is a conspiracy theory that has been created with the idea that someone is going back in time and changing something that used to be different. The reason this is becoming popular is because many people believe certain things such as book titles, logos, etc. a certain way, but when they go back and look at it now, it is different.