I still find them fascinating. I guess more specifically, I find the mechanisms of blindness to uphold them fascinating. Really basic stuff, and the associates apathy of the thought as well as action.
For example, the villagers in the article... start to smell something strange they've never smelled before. Okay. I can buy that, not many people have actually smelled burning human flesh before. But it is so close to an odor associated with death for nearly everyone that you don't go check it out? Make sure dead bodies aren't polluting the water supply? You're in a war after all. Just basic curiosity to start asking around if anyone knows what that smell is? Try to track it down yourself?
Come on. They didn't want to know. They couldn't be bothered to find answers to a situation that should have sparked some very basic human curiosity.
More recent example. Dems are buying illegal immigrant (?) from Wayfair online for satanic consumption.
Okay. Seems a little far fetched and actually see if there sany validity to it. The website most likely has the package dimensions for shipping. If not, there'll be a customer service number or chat bot, etc.
That would clue you in to the fact that Wayfair furniture comes prefab and disassembled if you didn't already know that. That train of thought should lead you to the curious quandary of how do they pack the kids in the box? Amongst other such considerations that are VERY obvious.
But believers of conspiracy aren't very curious. They don't ask questions. Even obvious ones.