follow the white rabbit

Illustration via Pat Corbett

‘Follow the White Rabbit’ is the most bonkers conspiracy theory you will ever read

Democrats wearing ankle monitoring bracelets? Fiji water? We try to explain the latest pro-Trump conspiracy theory.

 

Tiffany Kelly

Internet Culture

Posted on Nov 21, 2017   Updated on May 22, 2021, 10:31 am CDT

The proliferation of fake news that emerged during the 2016 presidential election is still growing, and it’s much worse than you imagined. On the internet, you can now find a whole mess of conspiracy theories surrounding Russia, President Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and anonymous posters like QAnon. There’s a hashtag for one involving many, many layers. It’s called “Follow The White Rabbit.”

The line is taken from Lewis Carroll’s book Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and it’s also appeared many times in pop culture. Neo is told to follow the White Rabbit at the beginning of The Matrix. But what happens if you follow the White Rabbit on Twitter? You fall down a very convoluted rabbit hole.

QAnon and the Follow the White Rabbit conspiracy theory

Some Twitter users (who are, notably, Pro-Trump) used the hashtag to reference an Alice in Wonderland-themed party that Obama threw in 2012. In this scenario, Obama is apparently Alice. Are you already lost? You should be. It doesn’t make any sense.

https://twitter.com/Wonder_Chick_/status/931269970788605952

If Obama is Alice, then the White Rabbit is…Hugh Hefner?

https://twitter.com/cajunsoulfire74/status/932624654002479104

READ MORE:

Who is QAnon?

Many of the tweets that use the White Rabbit hashtag also reference #QAnon or simply Q. What is that? Or, more accurately, who is QAnon? According to a Reddit post from November 7, it stands for an anonymous person who claimed to have Q-level security clearance. This person posted theories about a sequence of events that are supposed to rid the world of evil and take down a few powerful families, signing “Q” at the end. Q apparently made references to Alice in Wonderland, which prompted the hashtag.

Now, Q’s followers are looking for clues that the claims are legit. Here are some of the conspiracies emerging from the Follow the White Rabbit hashtag:

People think that Hillary and Chelsea Clinton, as well as Sen. John McCain, hid ankle monitoring bracelets under their walkable casts. In reality, they wore the casts to treat different injuries. McCain, for instance, suffered a tear to his Achilles tendon.

Others believe that when Trump drank Fiji water during a press conference, it meant that he knows something about Pizzagate. Pizzagate, if you’ve tried to forget, claimed that Hillary Clinton’s campaign was running a pedophile ring out of a Washington, D.C. pizzeria. Of course, it’s false. But many people still believe it’s real, and those same people are supporting the White Rabbit conspiracies.

READ MORE:

https://twitter.com/Flying4JC/status/931175407407239168

The Rothschild family

Another part of the White Rabbit conspiracy claims that the wealthy Rothschild family controls the world.

https://twitter.com/dontyelltalk/status/931679209927319552

This is probably as deep as you want to go into the rabbit hole. Go back now while you still know what facts are.

Editor’s note: This article is regularly updated for relevance.

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*First Published: Nov 21, 2017, 7:00 am CST