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Conspiracy is an agreement between two or more natural persons to break the law at some time in the future.
Is it difficult to conceive that conspiracies take place.
Are conspiracies more common among the rich or the poor.
Why does the media treat the possibilities of a conspiracy with disdain?
Think about these questions. Do not answer until you think about it for a while.
If you conclude that conspiracies are not rare, that the rich and powerful have more means to carry on conspiracies, That the media is not justified to treat the posibilities of a conspiracy with disdain, tell them so.

2007-01-06 16:24:29 · 2 answers · asked by johnfarber2000 6 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

Hello,

You raise some good points and questions. I agree with both your questions indeed.

Q#1: Are conspiracies more common among the rich or the poor? Yes. Here are some links below to answer this question.

Q#2: Why does the media treat the possibilities of a conspiracy with disdain? Because the media is owned lock, stock and barrel by the Rockefellers and Murdock.

I hope I have answered your questions.

2007-01-06 17:22:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

How the law treats conspiracies is very commonplace. People are convicted every day for conspiracies of one kind or another. What you are talking about is not the legal term of conspiracy, but the connotative form of the word.

You're talking about 'grand conspiracies', like the JFK assassination, but they do occur in business quite often, too. Enron is a prime example where the accounting firm conspired with Enron executives to defraud investors.

As for the media's treatment of conspiracy, it's understandable that they would need overwhelming proof that such educated people would do something so stupid. They give business people the benefit of the doubt until they prove otherwise.

2007-01-07 00:35:23 · answer #2 · answered by normobrian 6 · 0 0

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