Answer 1
You would gain many weird and treacherous friends before you were shot through the head from behind by persons unknown and your death rejoiced...
Answer 2
It is first important to distinguish the Nazi Swastika from the Aryan/Hindu Swastika of East Asia. The symbols are slightly different and easily confused, but there is no legal issue with the latter. As concerns the Nazi Swastika, the symbol can be used due to freedom of speech in the United States. However, use of the symbol does provide a person with unwanted attention. In addition, using the Nazi Swastika to deface property or incite race hatred can be considered a hate crime and carry a heavy sentence.
No, the Swastika was the symbol of the Nazi party. The party was formed after the great war by disaffected men unhappy at the perceived injustice of the treaty of Versailles and what they saw as the weak Weimar republic. Yes, the Swastika was used in WW1 by various units. The Swastika was an ancient symbol and the American Indians used it as a good luck symbol. The US 45th Infantry Division wore a shoulder sleeve insignia that included a Swastika because of its association with Oklahoma Indians. (Later it became a Red Diamond with a Yellow Swastika which was changed to a Yellow Thunderbird at the outbreak of WW2---because of its association with the Nazi's.) The Swastika was painted on several WW1 aircraft. One of France's leading Ace had a large swastika painted on the sides and top of the fuselage behind the cockpit. The Lafeyette Escadrille, composed of Americans who volunteered to fly for the French, had the head of an Indian Chief painted on their aircraft and on the bonnet was a small swastika. The Finnish national insignia was a Blue Swastika but I'm not sure if it was used during WW1 or after. During WW2 the Finnish national insignia painted on their aircraft was a white circle with a Blue Swastika. It may have been used in WW1.
that would only happen if japan didn't bomb the US
Yes, The 45th Infantry Division used the Swastika until 1930, then they changed their Symbol to the Thunderbird. Here is the link. http://www.45thdivisionmuseum.com/History/SwastikaToThunderbird.html
we would die
we would be in slavery
bhenkaland
nothing would happen but enviroment people would be happier!
Yes it is. We sell German war flags , but it would be illegal, under German law, for us to send them to Germany. This is also the case in Hungary and Brazil. Each time we sell overseas we have to check the law within the country.
We would all die
Their shoulder patch was a sun symbol indicating good luck. When Germany used it as a symbol of National socialism in 1933 it justly lost much of its allure. The symbol that Germany adopted was the ancient sun symbol known as the swastika. The Oklahoma National Guard changed their patch to the Thunderbird
Yes, the definition of a swastika is a curved cross. But not a Christian cross, since swastika's were around for centuries before Christianity. They have been used in Hindu religions for thousands of years.---------------No, the swastika is not a deformed Christian cross.Before the symbol was used by the National Socialist German Workers' Party, also known as the Nazi party, it was a well respected symbol in Hinduism (Sanatan Dharma). It can be seen in many ancient and more modern drawings depicting Hindu spiritual scenes.Hitler and the German socialists called the symbol a Hakenkreuz, and not a swastika. Although some of the leaders of the Nazi party were interested in the occult, it was very possible they were unaware that the swastika was an ancient auspicious symbol, and simply liked the design.Even though hakenkreuz means hooked cross, it was merely descriptive and not intended to demean the Christian cross. Hitler professed to be a Catholic, twisted as his beliefs may have been in that regard.See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_Hitler\'s_religious_beliefsAlso: http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/quotes_hitler.htmlThe swastika is an ancient symbol that can be found even in native American Indian art. The swastika was painted on the aircraft as a personal insignia for both French, American, and German pilots during WW1. The US 45th Infantry Division originally used the swastika in the design of its Shoulder Sleeve Insignia to denote its origin in the Oklohoma area but had to change it to a Thunderbird in 1939 due to the connection with Nazi Germany.According to Swastika, the Earliest Known Symbol and its Migrations by Thomas Wilson (1894), the oldest known archaeological evidence for the use of the swastika was from the city of Troy (Truva, in Hisarlık in Anatolia) dated to about 3000-2600BC. This makes the swastika a truly ancient human symbol.
there wouldn't be a world or us