• wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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      3 hours ago

      If a Hindu, Buddhist, or Jain puts a swastika outside their home, literally no one except an ignorant person would judge them for it.

      We’re talking about Scandinavians using the viking aesthetic for a photoshoot. It’s not nazism.

      • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        I said it has overtones of all the above. I didn’t say its all nazism. Its very surprising to me that people have chosen to read that when the only person who said anything like that was someone else trying to put words in my mouth.

        I don’t know, felt kind of cheap to me.

    • Deme@sopuli.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      That one has basically no other associations in the western world and I’m not a hindu, so I don’t have a reason to. But pagan traditions, symbolism and mythology are a different matter. If you wish to label all of those as nazism, only the nazis will thank you for it.

      • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Can you quote where I labelled them all the above as nazism please. You seem to have spent this entire conversation trying to put words in my mouth.

        In fact, can you also quote where I said we need to throw out everything the nazis ever tried to claim while we’re here too please. I feel like you made that one up as well.

        • Deme@sopuli.xyz
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          1 hour ago

          Your original response was “All of the above tbh.” to a list of critiques of the photoshoot. If you think that posing for a viking picture is too close to nazi symbolism, then why do you think that? I can’t see anything that would directly associate the picture with the german nazi party, or fascism in general.

          The only explanation I could figure was that you think the nazi appropriation of the general aesthetic taints the whole concept of vikings with the nazi label. If my assesment is incorrect, then I do apologize. It’s just that that specific line of thinking is sadly somewhat common and is the core of a wider phenomenon of surrendering the symbols and aesthetics of many pre-christian traditions (particularly in northern Europe) to the nazis.