an easy €1 million?
all you have to do is prove that the German city of Bielefeld, in the north-east of North
Rhine-Westphalia prove that it doesn’t exist, to have any hope of understanding
this bizarre offer, you have to go back to 1993 when the famous “Bielefeld?
There’s No Such Thing!” conspiracy theory appeared on the internet. Formulated
by a computer student named Achim Held, it basically claimed that Bielefeld – a
city of around 330,000 inhabitants, which has historically been around for
around 800 years – didn’t actually exist, because, unlike other German cities,
it wasn’t really known for anything in particular. The hilarious conspiracy
theory spread online and gained a life of its own, with many proponents
postulated that a group called “SIE,” or “THEY” in German, created an imaginary
illusion of the city, or that it had a secret city center where “dead”
celebrities like Elvis Presley and Kurt Cobain had been taken away to, above photograph by Bielefeld Marketing,
the so-called Bielefeld Conspiracy became ingrained in German
popular culture, with even personalities like Angela Merkel joking about in on
a visit to the city, telling people that she hadn’t been sure it existed, “So
it does exist,” Merkel said during her 2012 visit. “I had the
impression that I was there… I hope I may go there again.” but now local
authorities seem to have had enough of jokes on the behalf of their beloved
home and are offering a prize of one million euros to anyone who can prove that
Bielefeld doesn’t really exist. They say they are “99.99% certain that we can
refute any evidence”, but in the unlikely event that anyone proves the
non-existence of the German City taxpayers can rest assured that the prize will
be paid by Bielefeld Marketing’s sponsors, anyone willing to take part in this
unusual competition must submit their theory about the non-existence of
Bielefeld by September 4. Entries can come in various forms – pictures, videos
or text – but the submitted “pearls of wisdom must be incontrovertible”, actually
thinking about it, maybe it is not an ‘easy’ €1 million, how do you prove it does not exist?
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