Good choice Salty! I'm surprised there was anythi
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In 2005, Dice wrote and self-published The Resistance Manifesto, a book on Illuminati and New World Order conspiracy theories.[9] In 2009, he published The Illuminati: Facts & Fiction, discussing the possibility of an Illuminati secret society.[10] In 2010, The History Channel series Decoded featured Dice who met with the show's investigators to discuss the Illuminati secret society.[11]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Dice
Since then, Dice produced a series of YouTube videos in which he asks people in public places to sign satirical petitions, such as repealing the Bill of Rights "for Obama" and granting Obama immunity for any and all crimes he commits while in office.[12] The videos were discussed on Fox & Friends and in The Washington Times.[13][14]
In 2015, Los Angeles Times sports columnist Kevin Baxter derided Dice for his theory that Katy Perry was Satanic, and his theory that the Super Bowl halftime shows were elaborate Illuminati rituals .[15]
Michael Reagan controversy
In June 2008, Dice launched a campaign he called "Operation Inform the Soldiers" to urge people to send letters and DVDs to troops stationed in Iraq supporting a conspiracy theory that the September 11 attacks in 2001 were an "inside job".[ 16]
"People want the facts. The Marines are hungry for the truth—what got them there [in Iraq], why are they risking their lives—and we're going to help them understand that", he told Fox News. In reaction, syndicated talk show host Michael Reagan commented on-air that Dice should be found and tried for treason and said, "How about you take Mark Dice out and put him in the middle of a firing range. Tie him to a post, don't blindfold him, let it rip and have some fun with Mark Dice."
Reagan added that he would pay for the bullets.[17] Reagan apologized for his comments the following week.[17] Progressive advocacy group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) described the incident as part of a broader pattern by Reagan of advocating for murder, and it called on its readers to ask Radio America, Reagan's syndicator, to explain whether it permitted its hosts to "call for murder on the air."[17]