Swastika in a sentence as a noun

Ugh not to mention the constant stream of gay slurs and swastika emblems.

What's the problem with swastika emblems?Do you live in Germany?

As far as Che goes:At this point, the Che portrait is sort of the reverse story of the swastika.

Eg. I'm for freedom of speech but I'm not allowing anyone with swastika tattoos in to my house.

No, it's like using a picture of a circle, a triangle, a square and a swastika to suggest "famous shapes.

Unless Ayn Rand murdered a few million people on the side, her face is in no way commensurate with a swastika.

But it's like using a picture of a circle, a triangle, a square, and a swastika to suggest "geometric shapes".

> But how would you feel if you ran into your neighbor at the mailboxes and they were getting magazines with swastikas on them?Depends.

The swastika, for example, first used over 10,000 years BC, whose meaning changed utterly over 12 years in the first half of the 20th century.

It's Europe that actually bans fascists from marching down the street bearing swastika banners, and yet they still get elected to parliaments.

But referring to "Godwin's Law" in a discussion where the swastika actually is a relevant comparison pisses me off.

There's whole villages occupied by neo-nazis after they chased away the population that wouldn't salute the swastika flag.

I still don't really see the pants, but have in the past been guilty of designing, and using for two months in production, a logo that a focus group decided was "swastika-esque.

The swastika started out as a symbol of something good and got turned into a symbol of something monstrous; Che started out as something monstrous and got turned into a symbol of something good.

Swastika definitions

noun

the official emblem of the Nazi Party and the Third Reich; a cross with the arms bent at right angles in a clockwise direction

See also: Hakenkreuz