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#Counterintelligence, #Truth, and #ConspiracyTheories – Gemini Review
Counterintelligence, Truth, and Conspiracy Theories share.gemini.google/RklMCQ7g…
The “epistemological gap” in counterintelligence and public safety refers to the vast, unsettling void between what investigators can empirically prove and what the human mind intuitively feels must be true.When a world-shaking event occurs—like the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 or the attempted assassination of Donald Trump in 2024—that gap blows wide open. As Mike Rothschild argues in his Talking Points Memo piece, we are repeatedly forced to confront a reality where catastrophic historical moments are often caused by the mundane, the random, and the incompetent.
Here is a breakdown of how legal evidence, intuitive truths, and conspiracy theories interact within this gap, using the Dallas and Butler shootings as the ultimate case studies.
Legal Evidence and the Banality of Chaos
In the aftermath of an attack on a head of state, counterintelligence and law enforcement agencies are tasked with establishing legal evidence—the empirical timeline of how and who.
The problem is that the truth uncovered by these investigations is almost always profoundly unsatisfying. In both Dallas and Butler, the official forensic narratives point to a terrifying reality: highly trained security apparatuses were defeated by a mixture of ordinary incompetence, poor communication, and dumb luck.
The “Nobodies”: Both Lee Harvey Oswald and Thomas Matthew Crooks were, as Rothschild notes, “losers” in the grand historical sense. They were isolated, undistinguished young men who left behind no grand manifestos explaining their motives.
The Absence of a Mastermind: Both shooters exploited massive, yet mundane, security failures. Crooks simply climbed an unsecured warehouse roof after law enforcement lost sight of him; Oswald fired from a book depository overlooking a slow-moving, unarmored convertible.
Dead Ends: Because Oswald was killed two days later by Jack Ruby, and Crooks was killed seconds after firing, neither faced a public trial. Their sudden deaths severed the evidentiary trail, meaning the public never got the closure of a courtroom confession or cross-examination.Legal evidence gives us the physics of the shooting, but it rarely provides the psychological closure or the why that the public craves.
The Pull of Intuitive Truths
Because legal evidence often leaves us with the “lone gunman” reality, the public mind shifts toward intuitive truths.
Psychologists call this proportionality bias—the deeply ingrained human belief that the scale of a cause must match the scale of its effect. If a president is killed, or nearly killed, our intuition screams that an equally massive force must be responsible. The idea that a titan of history could be felled by a depressed 20-year-old with a rifle is existentially terrifying.
Rothschild captures this perfectly: “There is an inherent need to assign meaning and purpose to an act that often turns out to have none… We want them to be more than what they are.”
Intuitive truths are heavily shaped by a person’s pre-existing worldview. For left-leaning voters in 2024 who viewed Donald Trump as a master of media manipulation capable of doing anything to win, the “intuitive truth” was that the Butler shooting simply looked too perfectly cinematic—the blood, the fist pump, the American flag. It felt like a movie, so their intuition told them it was a movie.
Conspiracy Theories as Gap-Fillers
When legal evidence provides an unsatisfying narrative, and intuitive truths demand a grander explanation, conspiracy theories rush in to bridge the epistemological gap.
In the absence of a manifesto, people write their own. Rothschild details how the Butler shooting spawned a massive left-wing conspiracy theory within minutes—mirroring the right-wing and anti-government theories that have surrounded JFK for decades.
Weaponizing Anomalies: Conspiracy theories thrive by taking the normal “fog of war” discrepancies found in any messy investigation and framing them as proof of a cover-up. For example, because the Trump campaign exaggerated the size of the wound to his ear (claiming a two-centimeter hole that isn’t visible today), conspiracy theorists claimed he was never hit by a bullet at all, or that he cut himself with a razor blade like a pro wrestler.
The Illusion of the Staged Event: The dominant conspiracy surrounding Butler is that Trump hired Crooks to shoot at him, miss his head by millimeters, and allow Trump to pose for a historic photo. As Rothschild points out, the mechanics of this are completely absurd—relying on a remarkably poor shooter to execute an impossibly precise stunt that ends in his own death. Yet, to those who believe it, this narrative makes more sense than the truth.
The Rejection of Coincidence: In Dallas, it was the “magic bullet” and the umbrella man. In Butler, it was a video of a crane moving an American flag in the background, which theorists claimed was a prop being lowered for Trump’s photo op (it was just fluttering in the wind).The Core Takeaway
The epistemological gap is a permanent feature of counterintelligence. An investigation can conclusively prove that Thomas Matthew Crooks acted alone, but no amount of forensic evidence can cure the public’s psychological need for the universe to make narrative sense. As long as historical figures are vulnerable to the chaotic whims of anonymous individuals, Dallas and Butler will continue to spawn theories that try to force the messy reality of the world into a coherent, if fictional, script.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 10, 2026
