Posted on 03/01/2021 1:55:20 PM PST by SJackson
Exactly. Anyone watch the old Jackie Chan / Shaolin movies circa 70’s and early 80’s? I can count the swastikas in a number of them.
” You have to have “Jewish Food”? Stay home then. The whole world doesn’t revolve around you.”
So you are objecting to Jewish people brown-bagging kosher food. Interesting.
Their brown-bagging kosher food means the “world revolves around them”?
No, demanding people eat a certain way means the person thinks the world revolves around them.
I'm commenting on people travelling and crying about not
having other cultures cater to their picky little needs.
Pay more attention, you'll pick up on stuff like that.
the “swastika” is spastic
more projection by the left
They weren’t complaining about anybody not doing something for them. There’s not a word of complaint in the article except about actual cars carrying nazism. They bring their own food - they didn’t complain because others didn’t supply them with the food they wanted.
look inside a bit, Humblegunner, and ask yourself why their deciision to bring their own food pissed you off so much.
Vas it “Lily Marlene”?
Bullshit. Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit Bullshit. Every last one of those homegrown weeaboos knows exactly what the swastika means.
Yes they do. It is part of their religion to only eat Kosher food. The author wasn't complaining. The author was explaining why they were looking for vegan food.
So far as "traveling," I think, as a group, Jewish people have traveled a lot, e.g. migrated all over the world.
Here is something to think about. If you have no to little sanitation or water for cleaning items (living in a desert), then a Kosher diet is a pretty good way to stay healthy.
I read the article as well. I did not see any "crying about not having other cultures cater to their picky little needs" written there. What I DID see was someone eager to learn about other cultures but personally restricted to eating only kosher foods.
Many's the kosher-keeping businessman who had to live on canned tuna and fresh vegetables while on business trips to places where there were few Jews. Today, you have a variety of vacuum packed kosher foods which don't even need refrigeration, some of which are self-heating after you pull a couple of strings. I've camped out in the AZ desert and other remote areas and enjoyed gourmet meals packed like that, so it can be done.
What I think is that you are just looking to make foul remarks about Jews, particularly observant ones. No one asked you to do so, and it would be best if you kept such nasty remarks to yourself.
The base of the street light posts in our downtown area had swastikas on them when I was a boy in the 1950s. The lamp posts had been there since about 1910.
Yeah, you’re a liar.
When i am in a strange or unfamiliar place, with unknown foods and food sources, eating kosher assures some significant known food hygiene , sanitation, and preparation per Old Testament. As a veterinarian, food hygiene and sanitation are important to me.
My college roommates and Our best man was Jewish. We are Lutheran.
DOn’t forget the 45 degree offset.
The symbol is actually a radial representation of a spinning comet...
The Buddhist or hindu svastika 卍 (left-facing, counterclockwise,, represents a sunwise spin,( the opposite of Widdershins) where in circumnabulation of an object, that object is always on your right.
Both are often used to balance each other in religious garments imprinted or woven with the svastika pattern which are said to invoke a magical quality of protection. It is called sayagata pattern in Japanese:
because of the contotation of magical protection, the sayagata svastika pattern is also a popular tattoo pattern for protection:
A lot of weird shit can happen when you start dabbling in magic, as the Nazis discovered much to their own destruction.
Yes the symbol represents many things, but the actual pattern was born on the side of Mount Kailas, which was regarded for thousands of years by many cultures in the east, the levant and in some parts of Europe as the Center of the Universe.
Even the Mayans knew of it.
Mount Kailasha, Center of the Universe:
https://realbharat.org/mount-kailasha-the-centre-of-the-universe/
I wonder if their menu has a number 88, and what it is? Frankfurters with sauerkraut;-?
There used to be a great vegan restaurant on Mott Street in Manhattan called Vegetarian Paradise, that was also kosher, run by devout Buddhists. I was a regular there.
they all saw it...
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