But something within them leads away from more direct explanations,
& to blaming unseen conspirators, ie, the demons who cause the trouble.
It may be more a matter of projection and/or exaggeration of known and proven examples of government corruption or other malfeasance, incompetence, or general foolishness. There's no shortage of "demons" out there one could trot out, if one has a serious grudge with government and wants to generate hatred against the government.
We've all heard the stories about crooked politicians, Mafia bosses, evil corporate overlords out to control everything. It's in all the movies, so the public is already primed towards believing in these kinds of things.
Some would excuse government by blaming the conspirators for what they force government to do.
An example is those who blame the Military Industrial Complex for the wars.
The better explanation is that voters elect & re-elect politicians who start &
continue wars. There's no observable correlation between this nebulous
MIC & wars, but there is between voters & wars.
Well, yes and no. True, the voters elect the politicians who make policy and start wars, but voters are selecting what they see as a public face and often (albeit naively) believe what they say and promise. Likewise, they might believe all the negative stuff they say about their opponents. Politics is a dirty business, and the voters have very little viable choice. Lesser of two evils.
They could vote for the Communist Party. Or they could vote for the Libertarian Party. A lot of people don't even bother to vote at all.
But as to whether we should go to war or not, the politicians present the information to their constituents (who also get a lot of their information from the media), and they try to get the public to support the idea of going to war. Or there might be some heinous event like 9/11 to fire up the public into a war fever.
In other words, I don't believe the voters deliberately vote in warmongering politicians just because they actually want the US to go to war, not without a good reason anyway. I think that the politicians and media might present a certain skewed and biased perception of the outside world in such a way that makes people believe that some wars or other military actions are necessary. A lot of voters believe it and actively try to persuade others to believe it, and this is how voters ending selecting politicians who then order the military to do what they do. The military then goes to the private sector and buys whatever materials and equipment they need, for which the private sector contractors and vendors make money.
It's not necessarily far-fetched or even a conspiracy theory that a private businessperson would support any and all governmental policies which he/she believes to be profitable and lucrative for his/her own business interests. It doesn't have to prove or even imply that anything
illegal is going on, but it stands to reason that they could donate to political campaigns and candidates which favor their economic interests.
But I recognize that there are those who take it too far. When I look at the larger picture, I don't really see the MIC as some kind of evil nefarious bunch as some people would paint them. I look more at the ideas propagated by our politicians and others and try to evaluate it on that basis. It's possible that their intentions may be good and honorable. Even if there are underhanded dealings and other morally questionable actions, it could be argued that it's for the greater good of protecting America and Americans from harm.
At least we never had a nuclear war. If the MIC does exist, I would at least give them credit for that. The main thing I consider regarding our military, its leadership and relationships with private military contractors, I mostly hope that they're mostly sane individuals. There may be corruption at the Pentagon - like $15,000 toilet seats and whatnot - and I would like to see them do their best to thwart that. That's wasting and stealing the taxpayers' money. There may be some private deals made between military personnel and contractors - bribery, kickbacks, whatever. That seems plausible, although perhaps on a lower level.
But I don't think they're madmen, warmongers, or out to conquer the world. At least I hope not. That's why I don't really see the MIC in the same way that others do. I don't necessarily disagree with what they do as much as their reasoning for doing it, which is more of ideological/philosophical issue than a conspiracy theory.