Anonymous ID: 827315 Nov. 30, 2018, 9:56 p.m. No.4097228   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7413

>>4089220 (pb)

Last Bread Notable: THE Q PATCH >>4088938 (pb notable)

 

Guess where Sgt Matt Patten is from?

Broward Sheriff's Office

 

SGT Matthew Patten Awarded the Sheriff’s Foundation Medallion

The Sheriff’s Foundation Medallion is awarded by the Foundation’s Board of Directors to recognize an individual’s contribution to the mission of the Foundation. SWAT Sergeant Matthew Patten has served BSO and Broward County for over 24 years and provided invaluable training to the members of Class 1 of the Sheriff’s Foundation Academy and Classroom during a recent BSO/SWAT Anti-terrorism training exercise. SGT Patten’s meritorious efforts advanced 3 of the 4 pillars of the Foundation’s mission: Anti-Terrorism, Training, and Civic Education.

http://sheriffsfoundationofbroward.org/2015/10/01/sgt-matthew-patten-awarded-the-sheriffs-foundation-medallion/

 

>>4089974 (pb)

>>4089990 (pb) hammer and sickle pic

>>4089901 (pb)

And the other patch above and to the left is a hammer and sickle/scythe….

 

It is not a 'Hammer and Sickle'. It is a 'Mideviel Battle Axe and Scythe'.

 

FreeMasonry

As axes were closely associated with thunder, it also naturally became associated with rain, an important giver of life. Axes were also an essential tool in spreading civilizations. This is the context in which the symbol is used in the 22nd Degree. Using the axe to represent the spreading of civilizations can also been seen in flags. For example, the coat-of-arms of Brazilian municipality of Brusque shows an axe, added there to remember the "pioneering work of the first settlers and explorers". It is also a German tradition to strike a blow with an axe at the site of a new building. This custom originated from the legend of St. Wolfgang, who after having selected a solitary spot in the wilderness, prayed, and then threw his axe into the thicket; the spot on which the axe fell he regarded as the place where God intended he should build his place.

 

An example of a double-axe

 

The axe is also a symbol of destruction, as it can be used as a weapon, as was often the case with a weapon known as a battle-axe. This was probably an older usage of the symbol, as the earliest axes must have been double sided stones attached to an end of a piece of wood to serve as a tool.

 

As axes were often used for killing large animals intended as a sacrifice, some cultures associated the axe with sacrifices. This especially grew since martyrs such as Barnabus, Matthew, and Matthias were executed with an axe, and were often portrayed with one.

http://www.themasonictrowel.com/Articles/Symbolism/comprehensive_files/short_symbolism/the_symbolism_of_the_axe.htm

 

Battle Axe - Martyrdom.

http://www.thecemeteryclub.com/symbols.html

 

Scythe or Sickle ScytheSickle The hope of a fruitful harvest

https://www.fleurdelis.com/symbolism.htm

 

These people were laughing at us, Pence included.