As the Camp Fire burned last November, a startling conspiracy theory spread with the flames that added a sci-fi element to the real-life terror and chaos on the Ridgeโthat the blaze was intentionally started by blue laser beams fired from helicopters, specifically targeting homes and vehicles.
The masterminds behind this terrible act, depending on which YouTube video you watch or with whom you talk, could be anything from the Rothschilds to Big Cannabis corporations to Satan himself. But by far, the suspect most often named is the U.S. government.
Fueled by doctored or improperly identified photos and pseudo-scientific โexpertsโ sharing their โevidence,โ the laser theory is still being propagated via far-right bloggers, conservative fringe talk radio and, most effectively, YouTube. In one video posted just days after the fire started titled โGenocidal California Fire Operations”โwhich garnered tens of thousands of views before being taken down just last weekโan unidentified female narrator shared aerial videos of Paradise after the town burned.
โThatโs not a wildfireโthat looks like it was hit with a laser beam,โ she said, her voice dripping with knowing authority and rage. โCommon sense should at least beg questions in peopleโs minds when they see what Iโm showing you right now.โ
However, cult expert and retired Chico State professor Janja Lalich believes itโs a breakdown in common sense that leads to fervent belief in such theories. โ[Conspiracies] are extremely popular now, and itโs quite similar to the prevalence of cults in our country and around the world.
โAs the world has gotten more complex, people are looking for solutions, and America has a culture that looks for the quick fix,โ Lalich said. โPeople will latch onto something that provides them a framework for understanding the world, even if it defies logic, science and critical thought.โ
The idea that Californiaโs recent deadly and destructive wildfires were caused by malevolent forces wielding directed energy weapons wasnโt sparked by the Camp Fire, but began to proliferate when the Tubbs Fire ravaged Santa Rosa in October 2017.
One of the Twitter posts claiming that airborne lasers may be starting California wildfires.

Tracing the theory back to its original source is like trying to find the longest noodle in a dumpster full of spaghetti. Online videos, some with hundreds of thousands of views, touch on directed energy weaponsโsome claim lasers also started the Notre Dame Cathedral fireโand offer interwoven theories about why and by whom these attacks were perpetrated. One theory circulating by word-of-mouth in Butte Countyโlargely in pot-growing circlesโis that large cannabis companies will benefit from the disaster by burning out small growers and acquiring cheap, fertile land for their operations. Another theory is that property owners are being dislocated to allow construction of Californiaโs controversial high-speed rail project.
The most widespread and popular theories revolve around something called Agenda 21.
In reality, Agenda 21 is a nonbinding United Nations action plan developed in 1992 to encourage sustainable environmental practices, but the plan has been the subject of odd theories and conservative ire since its inception. The anti-Agenda 21 sentiment is particularly strong in rural Northern California, where some residents see efforts to limit mining, agriculture and loggingโas well as to create unpopulated wildlands and protect endangered speciesโas an attack on their way of life.
โThe idea of Agenda 21 isnโt a conspiracy theory, it is a real plan by the U.N. for what is now known to be world domination,โ said Paul Preston, a Yuba City-based broadcaster whose Agenda 21 Radio showโbroadcast on AM radio and onlineโfocuses on conspiracies. โTheyโre using environmentalism and the notion of sustainability to destroy sovereign states and boundaries so you have one borderless world.โ
Preston said heโs on the fence about laser attacks during the Camp Fire, though that hasnโt prevented him from sharing the theory on air. He said he received at least a dozen calls from Ridge residents during the fire saying they saw blue lasers. After spending 23 days on the scene of the Camp Fire, he concluded itโs โsuspiciousโ and โvery odd,โ citing burn patterns and the flamesโ extreme temperatures. (The latter detail is along the same lines as 9/11 Truthersโ claim that fire canโt melt steel beams.)
Preston said he invited researchers from โa very prestigious private universityโ to the burn site and that they found suspicious evidence. However, he declined to name the institution until they โgot back to him with some official results.โ
Lalich, who has written books about cults, elaborated on why people of all education levels buy into such outlandish ideas: โIn a moment of vulnerability, even someone whoโs intelligent and curious might see something that for some reason resonates with them. Then they go online and find a community of other people who believe this, too, which reinforces their beliefs.โ
These beliefs can be hurtful to fire survivors, she said, and cause even more damage by contributing to a rise in extremism.
โIt creates this us-versus-them mentality, where one group believes they have all the answers and only they know whatโs really going on. That leads to extremist viewpoints and, potentially, extremist action. Most of these theories are formed around paranoia. Combined, thatโs a perfect mix for violent action.โ
