Anonymous ID: 776373 Aug. 31, 2018, 10:26 p.m. No.2828924   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8969 >>9156

>>2828805

I never read the Alice in Wonderland tale. But just from some quick research and looking at Alex Podesta's art.

 

  • The white rabbit is the opposite of Alice. She's young and innocent. The white rabbit is old and figity. He's controlled, but somehow represents reality or a vehicle to truth.

 

  • Looking at Alex Podesta's art there are often two versions of himself.

 

  • Could this represent Dissociative Identity Disorder - a result of abuse or MK Ultra?

 

"In Lewis Carroll's own words, the White Rabbit is Alice's opposite in temperament and personality. Carroll says "…and what of the White Rabbit ….is he meant as a contrast to Alice? A contrast, distinctly. For her 'youth,' 'audacity,' 'vigour,' and 'swift directness of purpose,' read [contrast] 'elderly,' 'timid,' 'feeble,' and 'nervously shilly-shallying,' and you will get something of what I meant him to be. I think the White Rabbit should wear spectacles. I'm sure his voice should quaver, and his knees quiver, and his whole air suggest a total inability to say 'Boo' to a goose!"

 

In our riddle, does the white rabbit represent the victims of abuse?

 

I could be totally wrong. Just throwing it out there.