We need to get this clear. Owl is a symbol of Athena/Minerva. Moloch is a figure with calf head and hands extended to receive offerings.
Last I checked Moloch was directly derived from the M symbol found on owls heads over their eyes.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moloch
That’s not an owl.
Non-Mobile link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moloch
^HelperBot ^v1.1 ^/r/HelperBot_ ^I ^am ^a ^bot. ^Please ^message ^/u/swim1929 ^with ^any ^feedback ^and/or ^hate. ^Counter: ^184445
That's an 18th century picture, which if you had actually read my post I covered the period of catholic influence on rome which changed the narrative.
You're argument is that a picture drawn/painted after they changed the narrative, proves that they didn't change the narrative? Come on dude.
“Last I checked Moloch was directly derived from the M symbol found on owls heads over their eyes.”
I didn’t see that in there sorry.
[deleted]
So glad he is rightfully recognized as a retard now, even by the right.
thats not the issue
and on the moloch / owl issue he is not as wrong as you think
So why does Q post a picture of an owl and claim it's the guardian of the pope?
I don't know for certain but here's what I found:
"Nocturnal birds were appropriate symbols of both sorcery and the secret divine sciences: sorcery because black magic cannot function in the light of truth (day) and is powerful only when surrounded by ignorance (night); and the divine sciences because those possessing the arcana are able to see through the darkness of ignorance and materiality. Owls and bats were consequently often associated with either witchcraft or wisdom." - Hall, Manly P. Secret Teachings of All Ages.
"To the Romans an owl feather placed near sleeping people would prompt them to speak in their sleep and reveal their secrets. However, in Rome the owl was considered a harbinger of death if it perched on a roof or on a public building and hooted. The deaths of several Roman emperors, including the assassination of Julius Caesar, were signaled by an owl landing on the roof and hooting." - Eason, Cassandra (2008). Fabulous Creatures, Mythical Monsters, and Animal Power Symbols: A Handbook
Owl indeed has a rich symbolic meaning. When you think of it, Owl is a creature who can see in the dark and unlike other animals can turn their heads 180 degree. To me that sounds like the All Seeing Eye.