About Conspiracy Graph
Conspiracy Graph maps the connections inside and between conspiracy theories. Every named theory becomes a node. Every named person, organization, event, place, document, and recurring motif becomes a node. Every claim the theory makes about who's connected to what becomes an edge.
What we are
A reference graph. A way to see, at a glance, that the JFK and RFK threads share names. That MKUltra, COINTELPRO, and Mockingbird share an agency. That the Bilderberg, CFR, and Trilateral nodes share members. The connections are the point. The graph does the work.
What we are not
We are not a fact-checker. We are not a debunking site. We are not an amplifier. We do not render verdicts on whether any theory is true, partly true, or false. Edges describe what a theory claims; the prefix "alleged" carries that load when needed. The reader does the rest.
How it's built
Theory bodies come from open-source synthesis notes that pull from Wikipedia, news archives, FOIA releases, government records, and published books. Entity extraction runs locally on Qwen 2.5 across four DGX Spark machines, with strict instructions to surface named entities and the relationships the theory asserts, never to score them. Edges with no anchor in the source text don't ship.
How to use the graph
Click any theory. Watch the names that appear. Click a name; watch the other theories it shows up in. Watch the agencies, the dates, the documents. The path is the point.