You make a lot of assumptions about conspiracy researchers. As usual with you, everything-is-fine-so-keep-working-and-keeping-the-wheels-turning types, you accept that small conspiracies happen, but cannot comprehend big conspiracies happening. You lack the imagination of your rulers.
The fact that the British officers used 8,000 other ranks as guinea pigs to test the results of exposure to nuclear radiation was not and is not a "conspiracy". At the time—the early 1950s—scientists (and the Australian DoD) had no idea of the longer-term, disastrous effects of exposure to nuclear radiation of the scale emitted at Maralinga and Emu Field. In fact, of the people exposed to the ground radiation, not one died in the short term. It was only decades later that they started showing signs of radiation sickness—hyperthyroidism, gastric dysfunction, blindness, melanomas, leukemia, various cancers, and genetic disorders in their future children.
A conspiracy theory alleges an event or events to be
secretly influenced by a premeditated group or groups of powerful people or organizations working together.
There was no secrecy involved with these tests; I remember watching the newsreel footage at the time, and being overawed by the stuff I was seeing. As in WOW!!! I can recall long rows of soldiers, all wearing dark glasses, looking towards ground zero. At the detonation point, as one they all turned away, then a minute or two later, all turned back to watch the aftermath.
Anyway... to date their has not been one proven medical disorder to any person that confirms that any sort of injurious chemicals are being secretly sprayed into our atmosphere. It's also telling that no "chemtrail" conspiracy theorist has captured and contained any of these alleged chemical sprays for analysis.
I guess part of the reason I started this topic again was to draw the more than obvious parallels between those who believe in a flat earth, and those who believe in "chemtrails.
The pro-chemtrail responses from flat earthers, and their dismissal by round earthers have confirmed my opinion that if people believe in one alleged conspiracy, then they'll be likely to believe in them all.