More Reflections on V

"I couldn't sleep that night. I kept thinking about the unexplainable events that I had been involved in. Being a mathematician, I started to consider probabilities. V for Vendetta was released in March 2006 after a five-month delay. The “My Ashmolean My Museum” series of portrait photographs were exhibited from 12 May 2009 to promote the grand opening in November 2009. I normally only watch a film once. The scene with the maxim [Defend the children of the poor and punish the wrongdoer] was fleeting and could easily be missed in a blink of an eye. I don't know when the portraits were put on the Internet, but if I'd seen the film before then, I wouldn't have seen the picture. How many people have words written on their face for photographs anyway? The odds on finding that maxim and then finding it written on Chakrabarti's face posing as Lady Justice while I was in the middle of writing a letter addressed to her are quite simply astronomical — try it yourself: pick an issue that has been on your mind recently; select seven people you would like to discuss it with if you could; over the next twenty-four hours, select a phrase or some words that you have never come across that really connects you to the issue; then check the Internet to see if those words are derived from ancient religious scriptures and are written, word for word, on the faces of any of the people you chose and that person works towards its meaning and poses in a way identical to the source of the phrase or words you found." The Key?
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Published on October 09, 2012 03:16 Tags: child-abduction, cover-up, non-fiction, politics, true-crime, v-for-vendetta
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