Though the U.S. is no stranger to conspiracy theories surfacing on American soil, the Sandy Hook truther movement and the conspiracy faction's clout across the Internet seems to be slowly fading away. 

While the country continues to recover from the tragic shooting that occurred at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Conn., on Dec. 14, the truthers have relentlessly pushed forward with their claims against the U.S. government, whom they said are giving us false information on what really transpired. 

"Once I learned about all the false flag attacks in history that have been proven to be true, I knew it was only a matter of time before another came a long," the anonymous creator of the Sandy Hook Shooting - Fully Exposed" YouTube video stated to Gawker.

Salon reported that searches for the "Sandy Hook hoax" and "Sandy Hook conspiracy" have decreased drastically, after rapidly garnering million of hits by Jan. 16 alone.

The truther movement continues to gain YouTube views on its original video page and they've seemed to peak at just over 11.5 million mark, following a huge climb last week. However, the part two sequel footage hasn't been views nearly as many times.

While many people are happy to see the radical statements of the truthers fade into oblivion, Deen Freelon, an assistant professor at American University in Washington, said that the current drop in the number of Internet views doesn't necessarily mean the public lost an interest or that that the conspiracy theorists have halted their efforts.

"These search and media peaks and valleys are probably driven by news coverage," he explained. "We found similar patterns in our work on Twitter use during the Arab Spring - many of the tweets were from people interested in the topic as opposed to protest participants, and I'd be surprised if something similar wasn't going on here."