The FBI came out the next day and said two law enforcement officers fired on Crooks (imo in response to this video). It didn't get much attention but that's what they claimed.
Martenson has also acknowledged that the phone microphone was not stationary and that it might affect analysis.
I agree in general though that Martenson jumps to confident conclusions way too fast even if he's willing to change his mind just as fast. He was super confident about the ladder in his first video which served as a significant reminder for me that he shares his thoughts in an unscientific way.
Still, I think audio forensics, absent better video, is going to be the best source of evidence for an unofficial, alternative investigation.
As a kid I was always fascinated by things from the edge. I listened to Art Bell's show "Coast to Coast AM" many nights as I went to sleep. I was really into conspiracy theories as I've talked about on SN. Over the years as I did more reading and studying I learned that the things that governments and companies admit to doing, things that are exposed and proven are often so crazy few believe them. Not to mention that these stories are often buried and ignored in the history we are taught in schools(lies of omission). That led me to kinda pump the brakes on my conspiracy theory interest.
Then I started learning about how the state will use these theories to some of the less credible people that push them to discredit legitimate questions. I think our curiosity and excitement about finding something out or exposing something before others can cloud our judgement.
I'm not saying trust authority. I'm saying the opposite. Many say they don't trust authority but they trust some person online that has a lot to gain from grabbing attention with wild speculation. If one is skeptical of the state they should also have that same level of skepticism from companies and individuals with something to gain from their stories and theories.
Its a complex world and many will be seeking to profit off of these crazy events. What we know the state does and can prove they have done in the past is far more than enough to never trust them. We don't need to make stuff up.
Not suggesting this guy is making stuff up. This was the first time I had encountered him.
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121 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b OP 22 Jul
I hear you. I consider myself a conspiracy spectator. I know I'll never answer these questions, but I find watching others attempt to answer them fascinating. I don't believe conspiracy theories generically, but I don't believe official theories generically either. I believe what's independently verifiable and rarely is anything at this scale independently verifiable.
The kneejerk for anti-conspiracy theorists is that we need to shelter weak minds from conspiracies, including our own minds sometimes. I have less of this impulse than many do.
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Pretty much in the same place you are.
In many ways we are much better off today because we do have more voices and points of view that anyone can access.
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100%
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