Princess Di 
Nothing proves the potency of instant
Internet paranoia better than the sudden, shocking death of Britain's
Princess Diana. Even after the massive public mourning over the death of Diana
had abated, conspiracy theories of her "murder" raced along on-line
like a drunk on speed.
The conspiracy theories run the gamut
from the mundane (Diana as a threat to the royal family) to the mondo (Diana as
sacrificial Satanic princess). The idea that Diana was murdered became so
powerful that the billionaire Mohamed al-Fayed, the father of her also-dead
boyfriend Dodi Fayed, espoused it himself.
Mohamed al-Fayed's craving for proof
that Diana and Dodi were assassinated by British intelligence in cahoots with
the CIA led to the case of an Austrian man attempting to peddle bogus documents
to Fayed - that supposedly "proved" the plot.
That arrest led to the even odder
occurrence of the CIA issuing an official denial that it had anything to do
with Diana's death. Naturally, to many conspiracy theorists, the CIA's denial
was taken as confirmation. And who can blame them?
On the other hand, here are the basic
facts:
Diana Spencer, princess of Wales, died in
a car accident on August 31, 1997. she had just finished dinner at the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Paris
with her latest love interest, the previously noted Dodi Fayed. Dodi was the
affable ne'er-do-well son of equally aforementioned, ridiculously wealthy
Egyptian émigré Mohamed al-Fayed. The hotel was owned by Dodi's father.
Diana was always under intense
surveillance by the press. Pictures of the princess in a candid situation
commanded megadollars on the world tabloid-newspaper market. Since her romance
with Fayed went public just weeks earlier, the pressure form photographers had
grown even worse.
Seeking to avoid the media horde,
Diana and Dodi sneaked out the rear of the Ritz into an idling Mercedes. They
were accompanied by Diana's bodyguard, Trevor Rees-Jones, and a driver hired by
Fayed's family, Henri Paul.
After the accident, investigators
found that Paul had a huge level of alcohol in his blood. Also, he was taking
antidepressant drugs, which, investigators concluded, had nothing to do with
his state of intoxication. However, the presence of those drugs could indicate
something about Paul's state of mind and why he might take chances with his own
life and the lives of his passengers.
Paul also apparently had, in addition
to the large quantities of booze in his bloodstream, large quantities of cash
in his bank account, deposited shortly before the fatal day.
Diana's car did not dodge the
photographers. A group of them spotted the car and followed it. for some
reason, the driver reached speeds reported as high as two hundred kilometers
per hour. When the car entered the Point de l'Alma Tunnel, it went out of
control. Everyone in the car dies except for Rees-Jones, who was wearing a
seatbelt, which proves a whole other point.
At the time of her death, Diana was
easily the most famous woman in the world (sorry, Madonna), thanks to her
"fairy tale marriage to Britain's
future king and the seemingly ceaseless sequence of sordid scandals that
brought the fairy tale to a grim end. As beloved as she was by the public, she
was despised by there royal ex-in-laws. For the price of a mere twelve years of
marital agony, Diana won a permanent voice on the world stage.
But someone wanted to shut her up.
That is, if you buy that conspiracy
theories. And there's a wide selection available for purchase. The theories
range from the mundane to the bizarre. In the former category, the rather
ho-hum theory that Diana was killed because the British royal family doesn't
like Muslims and Diana, apparently, was about to get hitched to one. She had
finally found a serious beau after her breakup with Prince Charles (and the
previous boyfriends she'd cheated on him with). But Dodi wasn't a beau deemed
proper for a princess.
Dodi Fayed's father owns London's famed Harrod's
department store. The Fayeds always craved acceptance from the British
aristocracy, but for the white-bread British establishment (not to mention the
ultrastuffy royals) they were just too, well, swarthy. However, if Dodi had
succeeded in wooing Diana, the Fayeds would finally have there entrée. Rather
than risk having to treat these undesirables as equals, the powers behind the
British scenes simply killed both Dodi and Di.
One of the most vocal proponents of
the "anti-Muslim conspiracy" theory was Sherman Skolnick. In fact,
Skolnick is one of the most vocal proponents of almost any conspiracy theory.
He started as a Kennedy-assassination researcher and over the years has
branched out. His writings on almost any subject (e.g., he wrote that the
collapse of Britain's
Baring's Bank bore the clandestine stamp of the pope!) can be found on the
Internet these days.
Skolnick said that he had spoken to
numerous British and European journalists in the days following Diana's death
and they all told him basically the same thing.
"Diana was assassinated,"
he reports. "And the simple reason for the murder is, British intelligence
is pledged to protect the monarchy. The monarchy was not going to have a new
step-father for the heir to the throne, Prince William. They weren't going to
have a Muslim."
Of course, one could ask the
question, why not just kill Dodi? Why also whack Diana? But these sorts of
conspiracy theories always leave a lot of loose ends.
In any case, Skolnick's is an example
of a not-so-imaginative theory. Many of the Diana conspiracy theories were
considerably more exotic. An anonymous writer using the pseudonym "Ru
Mills" proposed the theory (on the Internet, of course), that
"whoever controls Princess Diana controls the world."
In the murky concoction, Mr. Mills
(or maybe Ms. Mills; it's difficult to tell) argues that a "Cult of
Diana" has existed for many centuries, going back to ancient Rome. This particular
Diana was a part of that legacy. Her sons, William and Harry, carry divine
blood.
"The current British Royal
Family are impostors," writes Mills. "The House of Windsor is a
fraud. But the lineage of Lady Diana Spencer goes back to Charles II of the
House of Stewart. The House of Stewart is of true royal blood."
And what is the origin of that
"true royal blood?" It dates back, according to Ru Mills, to the
Merovingian dynasty, a family of French royalty who ruled from about A.D. 500
to 750.
The history of the Merovingians, much
like that of Britain's
King Arthur, relies less on documentation than on legend, mystery, and
mysticism. There is, however, one popular theory about these supposedly magical
kings that Ru Mills buys without hesitation.
"All true European royalty is
descended from the Merovingians," says Ru, "which are believed to be
descendants of Jesus Christ."
Heavy! Diana, a
great-great-great-great-etc.-granddaughter of the Big C himself! In other
words, that car crash was more than just a tragic drunk-driving mishap. It was
a crucifixion.
Diana was sacrificed, says this
theory (if you can call it a "theory"). She left the masters of the
New World Order no choice, see? They wanted her to take a husband. They had a
certain man in mind. And that man?
None other than Bill Clinton.
Yes, according to this master plan,
Bill Clinton divorces Hillary (or just kills her, which might have been
easier), then weds Diana. The princess, says Ru Mills, has having none of it.
She refused to marry Bill Clinton. (Good thinking!)
Her sons, William and Harry, now
carry on the Merovingian legacy. They will start a new religion that will
control the world. So whoever controls them rules the world. And with Diana's
death they are controlled by the British royal family - the same family that
saw Diana as an impertinent rebel.
The idea that the British royal
family runs, well, everything is not new. If you study the Jack the Ripper
page, I check out the possibility that the British royals are all Freemasons
who commit murder in the name of their secret rituals.
Masons? Maybe. But Satanists?
Apparently nothing is too evil and sordid for these royals. Kitty Kelley had
nothing on a conspiracy theory that turned up (attributed to an anonymous
author) in the winter 1998 issue of Paranoia (a magazine whose outlook
is pretty much as advertised.
"If you think that the
assassination of Diana was a tiff inside the Royal family - or a racist plot to
keep the Egyptians out of Britain
- you are wrong… The assassination was an act of ritual, and the ritual is so
very effective because you are never looking out for it."
In other words, the
"murder" of Diana was a Satanic rite. And because no one could ever
believe anything so far-fetched, the conspirators are safe.
The anonymous author identifies an
international cult of Satanists in high places. Not surprisingly, Bill Clinton
is among them. British prime minister Tony Blair (the British Bill Clinton) is another devil
worshiper, as is General Colin Powell, whom the article identifies as "the
voodoo prince."
What possible evidence could exist
that a routine (but for its victims) drunk-driving accident was the work of
Satanists? One big tip-off, according to this conspiracy theory, was that Diana
was killed on the last day of August and "last days of the month are
significant in Satanism."
Uh-huh.
The anonymous author then lists a
series of photographs which, he or she says, show Diana before her death
dressed in occult attire - subtly. In one photo "she is wearing a dress
decorated with sequined pentagrams, exactly 13 are visible on the top part of
the dress." The author's conclusion: "Diana seems dressed as the
bride of Satan."
Those two theories are among the most
far-out and consequently the most interesting. Because most of the Diana
conspiracy theories were simply, well, boring.
The first hint in the mainstream
media of conspiracy theorizing surfaced a couple of days after Di's unfortunate
joy ride when that zany party dude Qaddafi came up with a whacked-out theory
that made the Reuters wire. Way to go, Mu'ammar! But 70 GCAT was way ahead of
good old Mr. Green Book. Since the first edition of their book came out, they
have been running a web site (http://www.conspire.com). all that their readers
have to do is click on an E-mail link to beam whatever perverse notions occupy
their minds directly to the gleaming, eight-by-ten-foot high-definition screen
at 70 GCAT central.
They received their first
Diana-conspiracy email within minutes (yes, that's right, minutes) of
the initial news bulletins. That one was followed by dozens more. Elsewhere on
the Internet, a handful of web sites and an entire newsgroup
(alt.conspiracy.princess-diana) cropped up and was immediately filled with
thousands of postings. Most of them focused on rather conventional themes. The
"anti-Muslim conspiracy" was popular, as was the rather illogical
notion that Prince Charles wanted Diana out of the way so that he could be
"free" to wed his longtime paramour, the rapidly aging Camilla
Parker-Bowles.
Then there's the "theory,"
such as it is, that Diana was killed by agents of the international arms
cartels to stop her crusade against land mines (though far more people are now
aware of that crusade than ever were before her demise).
Yet another version of the conspiracy
scenario has it that Diana faked her own death. Kind of like our own king here
in the United States
- Elvis! (There's some profound insight to be drawn from that analogy. I'm just
not sure what it is.)
Frankly, I'm a little disheartened by
this whole phenomenon. This is a paint-by-numbers, prefab conspiracy theory if
ever there was one. Back in the good ol' days when conspiracy theorists were
still considered crackpots, it actually took some kind of evidence to get this
type of frenzy under way. But somewhere along the line, in the last few years,
it became cool to be a conspiracy theorist. Now anytime some poor say drops
dead every frat boy with an Internet account races to be the first in his quad
to post the conspiracy of the moment.
The first move is usually
ascertaining a motive behind the postulated homicide - and because everyone's
got a motive to kill somebody, this is the easy part. And then that
motive is offered up with a knowingly cocked eyebrow as implicit proof that a
conspiracy must have occurred.
Ironic, isn't it? In all of the
research that I have done, it seems to me that people too often take what they
read in the paper or heard on the nightly news as gospel. And, I felt, that's
exactly what the big media wanted.
Think for yourselves! I cried out
without much success. But now conspiracy theorists themselves have become just
as predictable as any TV news anchorman interviewing a congressman.
I suppose we have to share some small
amount of credit for the current conspiracy vogue, and needless to say, I'm not
complaining. But his bandwagon is feeling a little bit crowded lately.
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