WELL, WELL, WELL ...đź’ĄTAKE A PEEK @ THE RUSSIAN'S COAT OF ARMS FLAG !!!đź’Ą
(media.greatawakening.win)
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That's Saint George the dragon slayer, revered in catholic and orthodox tradition.
Last week, a quote from diplomat George Kennan opposing the NATO expansion, got me. Something along "[Putins Russia] are not the Cold War soviets, but the good guys who did impossible: got rid of the real enemy, the communists". Never thought about it that way.
Yes, and isn’t he on a lot of British heraldry too?
Yes St George is the Patron saint o England
For England and Saint George!
https://bitaboutbritain.com/for-england-and-st-george/
Indeed. These battles have been going on for a very long time.
The ones you always thought were the good guys are the bad guys and the ones you always thought were the bad guys are the good guys. What an upside down topsy turvy world we are in.
The Soviet Union was NOT Russia.
It was Russia under Cabal occupation
As was supposedly every other European monarchy.
Never said it was.
St. George, I believe.
Not to be confused with St. George Floyd, patron saint of fentanyl and holding pregnant women at gun point.
Don’t forget his Porn Star status
The dragon in this picture is the same as from the Scythian/Tartarian Flag.
It was Peter who is credited with seceding the Moscovy Khanate from the greater Scythian/Tartarian Empire, of which it had been a part for at least 2500 years. They had tried to separate for a couple hundred years before Peter (starting with Vasili III and/or his son, Ivan the Terrible), but it was Peter who really turned the tide in that push for a divorce, which ultimately led to the final destruction of the Tartarian/Scythian Empire.
The Tartarian Empire was then erased from history by the Soviet Union (and a complicit world school system, created by Rockefeller et al) in the 1920/30s.
(For how the Soviet Union erased Tartaria from history, see Russia and her Colonies by Walter Kolartz, 1952, pages 31-41, though specifically page 39.)
I wonder what species dragons and snakes fall into...
That looks like a version of St. George and the Dragon.
You are correct.
It looks like a Chinese dragon imo.
I am not too sure its a chinese dragon, the chinese ones don't have wings
True, just serpent like. Like the Chinese dragons.
“KOLING”
Are dragons not reptilian?
I'm not a believer in the reptilians either. I just think it's more of a metaphor for the psychopaths who tend to gain high status positions in society, unable to understand human emotions, like reptilians.
I agree. Think of how often the bad/evil characters in stories, all the way back to the Bible, are depicted as snakes or dragons or reptiles. You'll see it all the time in movies.
It's because sociopaths/psychopaths, like reptiles, have no empathy and therefore no conscience. These humans aren't literally reptiles, but they have exactly the same sort of emotional range as the most dangerous of snakes, giant lizards, and crocodiles. That's why these people act the way they do.
There was a snake in the garden of Eden and it was deceptive!
The symbol on the coat of arms is indeed St. George slaying the dragon. It's an important and potent symbol that has reappeared throughout history, and people often misinterpret it.
I'll spare you the long-form essay, but in this context, we're dealing with the dragon and Christianity. Dragons, snakes, and other similar reptiles are symbols of paganism. St. George slays the dragon by converting pagan peoples there to Christianity. St. Patrick drives the snakes from Ireland by converting the pagans to Christianity.
It is an older symbol than that, which is why we see snakes and dragons as symbols in China, in Greece, ancient Egypt, and other societies as well. Here, the discussion is a bit more nuanced because there are variations on a theme, but the short version is that the dragon is a symbol of power and wisdom in various ways. This alone should present a very interesting contrast to the Christian use of the symbol.
When people talk about "reptilians," they're talking about really old families with deep roots that go back to the original understanding of the symbol. You'll hear this referring to "they" or the "powers that be" who actually hold most of the power in this world and make most of the truly consequential decisions that shape our world. There are those who respect them as symbols of power and wisdom, and those who hate them. When Queen Elizabeth II died recently, we heard a lot of use of this symbol in this context.
The picture is fuzzy but I see wings and a tail so I would say it looks like a dragon. Not “human reptilian”.