That's a fair point actually that I ought to have elaborated on in my original post, the differences are very clear to someone who knows them, (And uh, straight and curved makes little difference, it's actually the direction the arms point that marks the difference). the reasons I know the difference is because have dealt with so many people who have drawn or displayed a swastika on something, (A proper, Nazi, clockwise, swastika) and when confronted about it, try to sputter out some lame excuse about it being a "Hindu" symbol and not a racist one, which I have to add, coming from some pasty white american kid who has very clearly displayed a lack of interest in different cultures before, is absolutely priceless.Nouw said:But what if you were drawing the Hindu Swastika? I'd be a little scared of drawing the Buddhist swastika if everyone jumped to the conclusion that I was trying to be a racist fuckward. A general rule of thumb is though, curved=Nazi/straight=everything else. But this is a general rule, it's shown to be curved in the past too.
I suppose that example, which happens far more often than I'd like to admit, may have jaded me against honest naivete. Perhaps they are just stupid and ill-informed, and if it were just one or two marines who happened to post it on Facebook, I'd probably believe them. But the fact out of a dozen Marines, plus whomever took the picture, plus whoever was spectating, then out of all the people they would have shown it to, then the -business- who used it on their site, not one person went "Hey, wait a minute..." until somebody blew the whistle on them, and then they come up with this excuse that -reeks- of feeble backpedalling... that just doesn't sit right.
And while I apologize for slamming you with another wall of text, I feel I should chime in on the symbol itself. If these men had used proper Latin S's, then yes, this would in fact be simply a case of someone looking for controversy where there is none, But they used the Double Sig Runes which has only -ever- symbolized the Nazi SS, it was chosen specifically for it's call back to Nordic culture which Hitler believed was the bloodline of his Master Race. So unlike the swastika, and other symbols and gestures, this one leaves no room for misinterpretation.