The history of the swastika

Started by yankeedoodle, August 18, 2021, 11:14:30 AM

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yankeedoodle


yankeedoodle

QuoteThe swastika has had many meanings across many cultures in history. But for the last century or so, innocuous meanings have largely been displaced by associations with white supremacy and Nazi Germany's mass murder of Jews and other minority groups.
https://www.stopantisemitism.org/antisemitic-incidents-107/jewish-day-school-in-alaska-vandalized-with-swastikas

The swastika has been enjoyed by humanity for millennia.  It's easy to draw and pleasing to the eye because of it's symmetry.  It is easy to draw, and, for children, it's fun to draw.

Oh, dear, what's happening in Alaska?  Are the Nazis invading?  You would think so, judged by this article.  Kids are kids, and they draw thing - smiley faces, crude things - but how terrible when they learn that they can draw two lines and create something that is fun to draw and pleasing to the eye because of its symmetry: a swastika.  Surely they are NAZIS, according to jewish brainwashing. 

QuoteAssistant Principal Laura Scholes said they've had a spate of vandalism at the school this year. She said the swastika feels like an escalation.

"It's smiley faces, a couple of you know, sexually explicit kind of drawings, crude things, but not — not anything like this," she said.
https://www.stopantisemitism.org/antisemitic-incidents-107/jewish-day-school-in-alaska-vandalized-with-swastikas