Saturday, April 25, 2026

Conspiracy in Colorado

 


American Discourse News (further called ADN) is a conspiracist YouTube channel. This video is about David Wilcock, the recently deceased New Age-UFO-conspiracist personality. ADN clearly wants to believe in Wilcock´s conspiracy theories about everything from banking cabals to UFOs. The content-creator questions whether the man´s death was really a suicide (as stated by the Boulder County police) and wonders aloud if he may still be alive.

However...

Inadvertently, the presentation rather reveals that Wilcock´s conspiracy claims were...pretty damn wild. Wilcock backed a lawsuit by a certain Neil Keenan, a conspiracy theorist who tried to sue the Cabal supposedly running the world...in a New York district court! ADN suspects that Keenan´s lawsuit was an elaborate hoax. Later, Wilcock and his friend Corey Goode (a UFO-alien contactee/abductee) worked for the alternative media outlet Gaia. However, Wilcock later resigned from the outlet, claiming that Gaia´s managers were "Luciferians" involved in paedophilia, cannibalism and human sacrifice! Gaia sued him (presumably for libel) and the court case dragged on for years. 

Small wonder Wilcock had financial difficulties. He had also invested money in a company based in Niagara Falls which claims to develop new propulsion systems (UFO-related?). The company hasn´t reported any progress in decades. ADN implies that it may be another hoax. 

Stranger still is the relation between Wilcock and Goode. Officially, they had a fall out after both had left Gaia. Wilcock even posted a video blaming Goode for his difficulties. However, there are indications that the rift was an elaborate ruse to trick Gaia, and that both men were actually still on good terms. Indeed, Goode was probably the first person to publicly comment on Wilcock´s suicide on YouTube. In that video, he describes himself as a long-time friend of Wilcock.

I get the impression that David Wilcock was a victim of his own conspiracist delusions, constantly staking his credibility (and his personal finances) on extremely far out claims. Judging by his last YouTube video, Wilcock believed in a QAnon-type scenario according to which Donald Trump works for the Alliance, presumably some kind of benign Space Brothers. Wilcock must have experienced a lot of cognitive dissonance when Trump attacked Iran, posted the Jesus/Anti-Christ meme on Truth Social, and so on.

The whole case is tragic. And since the man was a conspiracy theorist, inevitably there are now conspiracy theories about his death. This is probably not the last time we hear about David Wilcock...

No comments:

Post a Comment