Display MoreToffoli, the problem here is that when people remark upon a coincidence they are usually implying the opposite.
You have on these pages repeatedly posted correlations without serious analysis as to causation, definitely give the impression you think these things are not coincidences (I'd mostly agree) and that in fact there is causation as suggested by some far out conspiracy theory (I'd nearly always disagree).
One reason I dislike the conspiracy theory stuff is that it is seldom debated honestly. When it is, those proposing these far-out explanations bring together a set of apparently corroborative facts without any research into alternate causes or sense of balance. It annoys me.
My classic "correlation is not causation" example for this thread:
The closer to the EU headquarters, the higher the risk from COVID-19?
It's true that correlation is not causation but it's also true that causation is always associated to a correlation. So a correlation may be a red-flag for causation.
Sorry I'm not an anti-vaxxer, but I'm deeply concerned with mandatory vaccines. There is a big difference. Am I a conspiracy theorist if I do not trust mainstream media, "big science" (ITER Higgs boson etc..) and corrupted lobbies and governments?