Here's an account from someone who is clearly in the know, as the account includes all kinds of specific details. Unlike the vague account above.
http://www.theforbiddenknowledge.com/hardtruth/fire1.htm
That's a pretty wild one. Quoting:
Friends, it's time you learned the real story. In October, 1977, a newly operational Russian Cosmos Interceptor shot down *Skylab. Skylab,* along with its crew of five American astronauts secretly aboard, died in a giant fireball over the United States. NASA immediately initiated a prolonged cover-up of what had happened. How do I know? Suffice it to say, I have a very high-up source of information.
So Skylab was shot down in October 1977, huh? Then I wonder: what
was that large and bright object in low earth orbit that was regularly seen until July 11, 1979? It looked
just like the Skylab launched in 1973. It even shared its orbit. I wrote a program to track Skylab in high school, and it was always right where it was supposed to be. Isn't that strange?
The Cold War, like nearly all wars, was a manipulated fraud.
Gosh, if only that were true. I sure wish he'd told us earlier; like many young kids (and adults!) when I learned about nuclear weapons I sometimes lay awake in bed at night wondering if the world would still be there in the morning. Through my early teens I assumed that when I reached 18 I'd be drafted, sent to Vietnam and almost certainly killed or maimed. At times I wondered what point there was in going to school and planning for a future that probably wouldn't happen.
Knowing that the Cold War was phony sure would have calmed a lot of jittery nerves in October 1962. I don't think we even had a TV set yet, and I probably would have been too young to really understand what it meant.
I think conspiracy theories serve much the same purpose as mythology. For many people the world is filled with inexplicable things and events, most of them bad, that they're powerless to control. Myths fill this gap. Even though they still can't control what's happening, at least they can focus their anxieties. They can
know who's responsible and why, even if most people don't. As someone here recently said, a conspiracy theory lets people feel better about themselves by creating a small, powerful and evil group to blame for all the bad things that happen to them. They can feel relieved that they themselves are blameless, innocent victims.