https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_string_(Kabbalah)
Saturn, a halo, Lucifer's fall?
How you are cut down to the ground, You who weakened the nations!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reichsadler
The "Imperial Eagle" is the heraldic eagle, derived from the Roman eagle standard, used by the Holy Roman Emperors and in modern coats of arms of Germany, including those of the Second German Empire, the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany. The same design has remained in use by the Federal Republic of Germany, albeit under the name "Federal Eagle".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaternion_Eagle
as told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses: โThe king of the gods Jupiter once burned with love for the Phrygian Ganymede, and something was found which Jove would rather be than what he was. Still he did not deign to take the form of any bird save that which could bear his thunderbolts [the eagle]. Without delay he cleft the air on his lying wings and stole away the Trojan boy, who even now, though against the will of Juno, mingles the nectar and attends the cups of Jove.โ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganymede_(mythology)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catamite
According to Plato's Laws, the Cretans were regularly accused of inventing the myth because they wanted to justify their unnatural pleasures.
Cretan pederasty as a social institution seems to have been grounded in an initiation which involved abduction. A man selected a youth, enlisted the chosen one's friends to help him, and carried off the object of his affections to his andreion, a sort of men's club or meeting hall. The youth received gifts, and the philetor along with the friends went away with him for two months into the countryside, where they hunted and feasted. At the end of this time, the philetor presented the youth with three contractually required gifts: military attire, an ox, and a drinking cup. Other costly gifts followed. Upon their return to the city, the youth sacrificed the ox to Zeus, and his friends joined him at the feast. He received special clothing that in adult life marked him as kleinos, "famous, renowned". The initiate was called a parastatheis, "he who stands beside", perhaps because, like Ganymede the cup-bearer of Zeus, he stood at the side of the philetor during meals in the andreion and served him from the cup that had been ceremonially presented. In this interpretation, the formal custom reflects myth and ritual.
In Crete, in order for the suitor to carry out the ritual abduction, the father had to approve him as worthy of the honor. Among the Athenians, as Socrates claims in Xenophon's Symposium, "Nothing of what concerns the boy is kept hidden from the father, by an ideal lover". In order to protect their sons from inappropriate attempts at seduction, fathers appointed slaves called pedagogues to watch over their sons. However, according to Aeschines, Athenian fathers would pray that their sons would be handsome and attractive, with the full knowledge that they would then attract the attention of men and "be the objects of fights because of erotic passions".
Ganymรจde Mรฉdicis (1684โ1685) by Pierre Laviron at Versailles.
>useless white male pilots