There is hardly any mechanism that could propel the conveyour belt fast enough for bearings in airplanes wheels to fail and stuck somehow.
The problem with this "myth" is, people are used to propelling themselves by interacting with ground. Running - your shoes are in contact with ground, you push yourself away. Cycling, cars - wheels are in contact with ground, you make them rotate...
While airplanes are more like swimming - you interact with the medium of water, propellers interact with medium of air, so do jets. Think about swimming upstream - if you do nothing, the water takes you down with it. When you start swimming, you are moving relative to the water, even if you are in standstil relative to the surface around. Similar story downstream, only the surface is moving faster away (similarly as conveyor belt would start moving backwards).
Now, if the aircraft stands on a conveyor belt, unless brakes are applied, you can consider it not connected to the belt itself. The wheels have very little inherent friction. Its like when you put your stickshift car in neutral before crossroads - it only slows down ever so slowly.
Now the aircraft wants to move, so you start the engine and add throttle. Unlike in car, where engine turns the wheels that apply force to the ground (conveyor belt), airplane engine moves a prop which applies force to the air. Air is not affected by movement of the belt.