Russ Winter #conspiracy #wingnut #crackpot winterwatch.net

A movie critic in 1985 described Disney’s “Return to Oz” as “bleak, creepy and sometimes terrifying.“ Why it was marketed to children? The movie, in fact, is about trauma-based mind control (MK).

Young Dorothy is taken to a grimy mental hospital to clear her head from all of the “Oz nonsense.” She’s then strapped down on a bed to be electroshocked. But before Dorothy leaves for the ward, she finds a key with the symbol for Oz. It represents the key to her core personality. At the clinic, we see the Dr. Worley holding the key. This represents him taking over her mind and becoming her MK handler. Dr. Worley tells Dorothy “I know exactly what will cheer you up!” and presents to her his electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) machine.

While looking at the machine, Dorothy sees the reflection of another girl. The electroshock machine is the gateway to her alter persona – “Ozma.”
<...>
Once Dorothy goes to the land of dissociation, or Oz, she encounters the same creepy people from the MK hospital. The head nurse is Mombi, a twisted, sadistic motherly figure. In mind control terms, Dr. Worley is the chief MK slave handler in this swell movie. Dorothy is tricked into thinking her “best friend” in Oz is the ECT machine.
<...>
Finally Dorothy meets her main handler, Dr. Worley, the Nome King. The folks at Winter Watch are not interested in covering all of the Luciferian mind control and insanity evident in this movie, but this is the Nome King scene in question.
<...>
Before returning to Kansas, Dorothy and Ozma meet at a mirror, and the latter becomes “real.” Dorothy’s programming is complete and Ozma, her programmed alter persona, is fully present in her mind.
<...>
“Return to Oz” was written, produced and directed by Disney’s lip-licking lizards. Crime Syndicate degenerates hate normal people. They don’t like people feeling better than them, so the abuse starts young. It’s called “misanthropy,” which is a general dislike, distrust or hatred of most of the human species.

8 comments

Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

To post a comment, you'll need to Sign in or Register. Making an account also allows you to claim credit for submitting quotes, and to vote on quotes and comments. You don't even need to give us your email address.