About Conspiracy Wiki
Conspiracy Wiki is an independent reference work that documents conspiracy theories as cultural, historical, and political subjects. For any given theory we set out what is claimed, by whom, on what evidence, and how those claims have been received — with sources, and with a clear line between established fact, allegation, and disputed claim.
What We Do — and What We Don’t
We describe and contextualize theories; we do not promotethem. The existence of an article is never a claim that a theory is true, and we do not present unverified allegations as fact. Our job is to explain a claim accurately, attribute it to its sources, lay out the evidence for and against it, and let readers understand the subject — not to persuade anyone that a theory is correct. Where a claim is unfounded or has been debunked, we say so plainly.
Why This Exists
Conspiracy theories shape how people understand real events, institutions, and one another, yet reliable, neutral, well-sourced information about them is scattered and uneven. Conspiracy Wiki aims to be a single place where a theory can be examined calmly and factually: what it actually says, where it came from, what the record shows, and why it has persisted. Understanding a claim is the first step to evaluating it.
How Articles Are Made
Articles are drafted with the assistance of AI language tools and are then reviewed, sourced, corrected, and maintained by a human editor and the contributing community. AI is used as a drafting and research aid only — never as an authority — and every published article is subject to human review with a permanently visible edit history. We explain this process, and our reasoning for it, in full on our Editorial Standards & Methodology page, which also covers our sourcing requirements, neutrality policy, and how corrections are handled.
Who Runs It
Conspiracy Wiki is founded and edited by C. Johnson(Founder & Editor), who is responsible for the site’s editorial standards, sourcing requirements, and review process, working alongside its contributing community. The site is independently operated: articles are not sponsored, and documenting a theory is never a paid placement.
Corrections & Contact
We correct errors in the open. If you find an inaccuracy, use the Disputebutton on the article in question, raise it on that article’s Discussion page, or reach us by email. Corrections remain visible in the revision history; we do not silently remove or rewrite the record.