We’re all, to one degree or another, fascinated by conspiracy theories. Many of us scoff at some of them, yet nod in agreement at others. Whether your politics tend toward either conservative or liberal, it doesn’t matter. No one, it seems, is immune from belief in some conspiracy theories to one degree or another.
Often times, we don’t even realize that we believe in a conspiracy theory simply because we think of the matter as a fact, not a conspiracy theory. For example, about 90 million Americans, or about 29 percent of the population, believe aliens exist. Some 66 million think aliens landed at Roswell in 1947. If you don’t accept those ideas, then you’re more likely to see them as conspiracy theories. The rest of us, meanwhile, might say: ‘Oh yeah, that’s true.’
The two most popular conspiracy theories deal with presidents. A whopping 51 percent of Americans – 160 million – belief that JFK was killed in a conspiracy rather than by a single crazed shooter. The next most convincing theory, favored by 44 percent or 138 million Americans, is that George W. Bush and cohorts intentionally misled the American public on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.
These are a few of the conspiracies that Public Policy Polling asked Americans about in the aftermath of the 2012 election. They also asked respondents who they voted for.
Interestingly, Republicans tend to be more conspiracy-prone than Democrats. For example, they are far more prone to favor the idea that the government is populated by lizard people. Five percent of Romney voters gave the thumbs up on that one, while two percent of Obama voters agreed.
So if you’re among the 37 percent of Americans who believe that global warming is a hoax, it’s likely that you voted for Romney. That’s because 61 percent of Republican voters accept that conspiracy theory, compared to 12 percent of Obama supporters.
Only three conspiracies were more commonly believed by Obama supporters: that Bush intentionally misled America about Iraq’s WMDs (a massive 69 percent of his supporters believe that one), that the CIA launched the crack epidemic, and that the moon landing was faked.
There are two theories with equal support among Obama and Romney supporters: that aliens exist and the one about fluoridation. Everything else in the poll was believed more by Romney supporters.
Public Policy Polling, by the way, correctly predicted the presidential election results in all 50 states. But they also have become known for their ‘weird’ polls. During last year’s presidential campaign, for example, they asked: “If God exists, do you approve of its handling of natural disasters?”
Here’s how the Atlantic Wire arranged the findings from most- to least-believed. They also show the actual Americans represented by the percentages.
| Conspiracy | Percent believing | Number of Americans believing |
| JFK was killed by conspiracy | 51 percent | 160,096,160 |
| Bush intentionally misled on Iraq WMDs | 44 percent | 138,122,178 |
| Global warming is a hoax | 37 percent | 116,148,195 |
| Aliens exist | 29 percent | 91,035,072 |
| New World Order | 28 percent | 87,895,931 |
| Hussein was involved in 9/11 | 28 percent | 87,895,931 |
| A UFO crashed at Roswell | 21 percent | 65,921,948 |
| Vaccines are linked to autism | 20 percent | 62,782,808 |
| The government controls minds with TV | 15 percent | 47,087,106 |
| Medical industry invents diseases | 15 percent | 47,087,106 |
| CIA developed crack | 14 percent | 43,947,966 |
| Bigfoot exists | 14 percent | 43,947,966 |
| Obama is the Antichrist | 13 percent | 40,808,825 |
| The government allowed 9/11 | 11 percent | 34,530,544 |
| Fluoride is dangerous | 9 percent | 28,252,264 |
| The moon landing was faked | 7 percent | 21,973,983 |
| Bin Laden is alive | 6 percent | 18,834,842 |
| Airplane contrails are sinister chemicals | 5 percent | 15,695,702 |
| McCartney died in 1966 | 5 percent | 15,695,702 |
| Lizard people control politics | 4 percent | 12,556,562 |
Here’s PPP’s press release on the poll, and here’s more on how Democrats and Republicans differ on conspiracies.
We definitely live in interesting times!
And to all our U.S. friends, well, happy income tax day. Might as well embrace it, right?
















