Fraud, markets, banks, offshore secrecy, and myths about who controls money.
Finance and economics has a built-in advantage for Conspirafy: many real conspiracies are documented in legal and regulatory records. LIBOR, Wirecard, Panama Papers, FTX, cryptocurrency wash trading, and parts of the 2008 financial crisis all show collusion, concealment, or fraud. The paper trail is often stronger than in other categories because money leaves records.
The risk is that confirmed financial misconduct can make every monetary institution look like a single hidden control system. Federal Reserve claims, central-bank myths, Great Reset economics, cashless-society panic, and market-manipulation narratives often mix real institutional complexity with unsupported conclusions. This category should explain structure before verdict.
Finance pages should be rich in primary sources: indictments, settlement agreements, SEC and CFTC orders, parliamentary reports, bankruptcy filings, leaked document repositories, court exhibits, and reputable investigative journalism. Books can be useful for narrative context, but the page should make clear which claims are supported by documents.
Future gaps should connect finance to broader conspiracy ecosystems: Great Reset and WEF narratives, cashless society claims, ESG/social-credit claims, central bank digital currency myths, food-supply inflation conspiracies, and claims about elite ownership of every major asset. Some belong in government or technology too, which is exactly why topic hubs matter.
Readers need a way to distinguish incentives from plots. A bank can act badly without requiring a secret world government. A market can be manipulated without proving that every price movement is controlled. A public-private institution can be opaque without being wholly private. Pages should make those distinctions explicit.
The category should become the site's 'follow the documents' training ground. If a claim is true, there should be filings, fines, transactions, testimony, or leaked records. If the claim leaps from complexity to omnipotence, the page should show the leap.
Reading path
Start with LIBOR, Panama Papers, Wirecard, FTX-adjacent crypto manipulation, and the 2008 crisis. Then read the Federal Reserve page to see how real institutional opacity gets turned into a stronger unsupported claim.
Coverage gaps we are filling next
- Great Reset economic claims
- Cashless society control claims
- Central bank digital currency myths
- ESG and social-credit claims
- Food-supply and inflation conspiracy claims