Steve Quayle

Steve Quayle is an extreme right wing conspiracy theorist, pseudohistorian, religious fundamentalist, doomsday fearmonger, gold bug, and radio kookbabbler.

Media
Quayle is an occasional guest on right wing conspiracy media, including Coast to Coast AM, Jim Bakker, Alex Jones, and TruNews.


 * On TruNews, he stated that President Obama accepted the Democratic presidential nomination from "Satan’s throne" in 2008.


 * On Jim Bakker's show, Quayle claimed there is a massive conspiracy by "the global elite" to reduce the human population by 90 percent through the use of birth control, Ebola, and the Zika virus.


 * On Coast to Coast AM, Quayle further expanded on this theme by combining his depopulation conspiracy theory with chemtrails, biowarfare, genetic experimentation, and a secret airbase in Nevada.


 * Alex Jones apparently believes that Quayle is a prophet and that all his predictions have come true.

Giants
I have invested over 30 years researching the vast history of giants. It has, for the most part, been kept from the public. Proof of giants' existence &mdash; their skeletal remains &mdash; has been quickly secreted away in obscure museums, when not destroyed. Additionally, time has cloaked and sugar-coated these creatures' true perverse nature, the majority too vile, too demonic for bedtime stories. However, history is replete with their tales of unimaginable cruelty, sexual perversity, cannibalism and pagan rituals. This is only the beginning. Some things are best forgotten… or are they?

Quayle claims to be "the leading authority" on giants. Apparently, he believes that was a giant capable of running into a herd of bison and scooping up one in his arms. His evidence for this is because the Bible said so in the book of Genesis. He also believes that the giants before the days of Noah were "very advanced" and had "supernatural" powers.

Conspiracies
The truth is that much of what many today believe unlikely or impossible is in fact not only possible be [sic] most likely actually happened.

Quayle's appearances in kook media are generally sales pitches for his various publications. No conspiracy theory is left untouched in Quayle's worldview, and it can be argued that Quayle believes that all conspiracy theories are wrapped up into a Unified Conspiracy Theory.TM


 * Using advanced technology, the global elite can manipulate the weather and cause extended periods of drought or storm.


 * The Nazis didn't lose World War II and built an empire under the ice.


 * "Monsterous [sic] creations" are being developed with secret technology in labs around the world.


 * Giants, transhumanism, genetic manipulation, Bible prophecy, the end times, it's all true!


 * Apparently, it's all because of the Catholics. Or something.


 * On Coast to Coast AM Quayle called immigrants coming into the US "infectons", claiming they could be "intentionally exposed to some of the most deadly pathogens with the goal of spreading disease". Nobody thought to tell him that perfectly legitimate businessmen returning from exotic foreign locations are every bit as much of a potential threat.


 * According to Quayle, the bombardment of the US embassy in Moscow with microwaves (1953-76) was not, as reported at the time, a form of radio jamming but a successful scheme using "quantum frequencies" to project viruses through thin air. Amazing what quantum frequencies can achieve, especially considering that there's no such thing.

Goldbuggery
Quayle runs a precious metals business that panders to the paranoid, using typical scaremongering language.