The news, like the world, seems to be spinning out of control at the moment.
A lot of it has to do with the ongoing U.S. presidential campaign, which has been going on for over a year now and has seen the election result come crashing down in just a few days. For instance, just last week, the media started running headlines about “24 conspiracies” and then suddenly we’re being told to expect a “conspiracy of the week.
I think we need a 24 conspiracy of the week. Something that gets more conspiratorial every day. For instance, maybe there is a big new virus hitting the world, and when it does, the world will be split in two, with some people being infected, and others having no clue about what’s going on and still being able to do their jobs.
Or maybe there is a conspiracy of the week that is so big that it will be the biggest story in the world. Like the biggest new invention in the history of the world, the internet. Which, by the way, is also being used to distribute a huge amount of deadly viruses. Or maybe someone is using the internet to try and set off another nuclear bomb in the middle of the world.
The whole thing is one of those conspiracy theories that is so big that it is almost impossible to get it right. That is, unless you actually believe everything conspiracy theorists say. Or you live on a little island in the middle of the ocean and are completely oblivious to all of the things going on around you. Just trust me, 24 conspiracy is going to be the biggest story in the world.
In a way, 24 conspiracy seems to be a bit of both, because it is big enough that it is impossible to be absolutely sure of anything yet small enough to be fun to watch.
24 conspiracy focuses on the world’s most notorious terrorist group, the 24 group. The 24 group is a loosely-defined umbrella group of terrorist extremists, most of whom were active from the late 80’s and early 90’s. The group was founded by a former CIA agent, Osama bin Laden, who was arrested in 1993 in Pakistan. He was convicted in 2001 and is currently on death row in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The group first emerged in the late 1980s as an offshoot of the 9-11 attacks, a move aimed at increasing the group’s capabilities in a world where terrorism was increasing. But the group’s reach was quickly picked up by a new group of terrorists, the Afghan Mujahideen, a terrorist group led by the late Osama bin Laden. The Afghan Mujahideen have continued to engage in terrorism, and have been involved in a series of deadly attacks on American soldiers.
The name “24” refers to a series of attacks on the government of the United States of America that was carried out by the Afghan Mujahideen in 2010. The first attack was carried out by a suicide bomber in the Boston suburb of Logan Square, and the second attack was carried out in a car bomb in the Washington, DC, area. The third attack was carried out in a double assassination attempt on the American ambassador to Libya in Benghazi, Libya.
The name 24 is very apt, and it describes a series of incidents in which there are seemingly two sides to every story. The American government and the Mujahideen have different motivations; the government would like to get the war with Al Qaeda behind it, and Mujahideen would like to create a new state free of Al Qaeda. The Washington Post would have you believe that the American government is behind the attacks, and they have no evidence to support that claim.