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It represents feelings towards your parents - the wicked witch being seen as the bad mother who abandons her child, and the good witch being seen as the caring mother. Also, the wizard represents the child's tendency to see the parent as a god-like figure who is powerful and dominant, but deep down they are human and have faults just like everyone else.
It also represents life's journey and the desire to find some belonging, whether it be within or with other people.
Also, it can be seen as representing the role of a therapist - many people go to therapy asking them to sort things out for them, but in reality the person always had the power within themselves to get what they wanted, and they needed the therapist to tell them that.

2006-10-15 06:25:35 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think the main theory is that people often feel unhappy in their current situation, but once things change, they realize that they were happier than they originally thought. That comes form Dorothy wanting to run away, but then once she was gone, wanting nothing more than to be home. I think another theory is that we don't always appreciate the people in our lives as much as we should. All of the people Dorothy met while in OZ represented real people that she cared about.

I don't know if I would call these theories, but I have heard that the story represents the American economy. The scarecrow represents the farmer, the tin man represents the industrial worker. I can't remember what the lion represents. Maybe a victim of the system. Oz supposedly stands for ounces of gold, and the yellow brick road also stands for gold. My guess is that the witch represents competition. The wizard may represent the president, and how he has a lot less power than people realize.
I think the cyclone represents turmoil. I'm thinking the midgets are the townspeople, and Dorothy is representative of their desire for a new leader. Maybe the fact that she is a child is symbolic of a desire for the simpler things in life. Wow. Interesting question.

2006-10-12 19:29:42 · answer #2 · answered by Lawgirl 7 · 1 0

The history behind the Wizard of Oz programming is interesting. It suggests that the Wizard of Oz has had an important part in the occult world all along. One of the secrets of the Mystery Religions, especially the Egyptian Isis mystery religion was the ability to use drugs and torture to create multiple personalities. The word Oz is known to have been used by its author as an abbreviation for Osirus. Monarch victims have the “golden penis of Osirus” placed into them. The Grimm brothers, who were cabalistic jews, gathered the folk occult stories together. Their stories are full of spells, trances, and drugs. Sleeping Beauty is put to sleep, and the trigger to wake her is a kiss on the lips. These are serious hints that the occult world didn’t stop programming people with dissociative states and triggers when the ancient Egyptian empires fell. Instead of using modern lingo such as “hypnotize”, they would say “cast a spell.” Later in Freemasonry, the Right Worshipful Master would “charge” (meaning hypnotize) an initiate. The occultist Baum, a member of the Theosophical Society, was inspired by some spirit who gave him the “magic key” to write the Wizard of Oz book, which came out in 1900. The book’s story is full of satanic activity and satanic thinking. The story was chosen in the late 1940s to be the basis for the Illuminati/Intelligence community’s trauma-based total mind control programming. As a way of enhancing the effect of the programming, Monarch slaves are conditioned to place trigger items into their lives. When the movie was made, Judy Garland, who had lived a life touched by the occult world’s abuse, was chosen to act as Dorothy. Judy’s later husband, Mickey De Vinko was a satanist and the chief assistant to Roy Radin, a rich satanist who worked with the Illuminati, and who controlled the “Process church” covens which had as members mass murderers Berkowitz and Monarch slave Charlie Manson. There are several members of the Carr family, who are also tied into both De Vinko and Radin’s Process Church and the Illuminati. With the numerous long term connections between the Wizard of Oz books, and movie to the highest levels of the occult world, it is not without reason that one can theorize that the original series of 14 Oz books had an ulterior motive behind them. The 14 books of the Oz series are: 1) The Wizard of Oz, 2) The Land of Oz, 3) Ozma of Oz, 4) Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz, 5) The Road to Oz, 6) The Emerald City of Oz, 7) The Patchwork Girl of Oz, 8) Tik-tok of Oz, 9) The Scarecrow of Oz, 10) Rinkitink in Oz, 11) The Lost Princess of Oz, 12) The Tinman Woodsman of Oz, 13) The Magic of Oz, 14) Glinda of Oz. These books are still being sold, and are being read to children who are being programmed with trauma-based total mind control. The 14 books came out in various editions. The originals came out in 1900 and shortly thereafter. In the 1930s, the 1940’s, and the 1950’s the words were retype set and given different pages. (When working with a survivor it might help to identify what decade the edition the slave was programmed with, because the pictures and the page numbers varied from edition to edition.) Of course, having good pictures is an asset in programming, because the child will visualize off of the pictures when building its internal world. In addition to this, large Wizard of Oz theme parks are being built by the Illuminati to provide places to carry out programming and to reinforce the programming which traps the minds of Monarch slaves. The best example of this, is the audacious MGM Grand complex in Las Vegas, although other theme parks around America also use a Wizard of Oz theme. If you have read Fritz Springmeier’s Be Wise As Serpents you will know how the Theosophical Society ties in with Freemasonry, Satanism, and Lucis Trust. Several famous members of the Theosophical Society include:



Adolf Hitler (a Satanist who practiced human sacrifice, & who had HPB’s book at his side.)

Mahatma Gandhi (a Hindu guru considered a god by some of his followers. Gandhi was successful with the British in part because of the Theosophical Society.)

2006-10-13 06:42:20 · answer #3 · answered by His 5 · 0 0

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