The middle one is the symbol for the Japanese religion Shinto, it's a majestic gate that a person passes through before entering a Japanese shrine, it's normally depicted as a red gate. 10:50
4:25 there is a youtube channel called lemmino that tried to find the origin of that "S" symbol and he made a pretty interesting video about it called "the universial S"
3:26 a former pastor at my family's church actually talked about it this during one of his sermons; if Jesus had been hanged, we'd probably see Christians wearing nooses around their necks.
Just wanted to inform everyone, that apparently sam finally wants to return. Before this video i wanted to look up, if there is some news from him about that and he made a post on his subreddit (the official one, which starts with slather on the honey and not the one, who shares his name). Apparently he wants to get back into making videos and he asked for ideas. the reddit post is a month old now, so maybe soon a new video will come out.
The Cool S was not the logo for Stussey and it's been around LONG BEFORE the 90's. LEMMiNO did a video on it, the first recorded use of the S was in 1890
The star of david isnt really a religious symbol, it's more of a symbol of jewish ethnic and national identity. That's why it was used to identity jews in nazi germany and occupied territories, regardless of how secular the individual was. If you wanted to identify a religious jewish symbol, then the menorah has been used since ancient times as such due to its association with the temple. Other options are a shofar or the lion of judah, but they're far less prevalent or widely recognised EDIT: To anyone wondering where the jewish people got the star of david from, they took it from arabic traders who believed it was the ancient seal of Solomon. In actuality the seal of Solomon was lost to history, and nobody has the first clue what it looked like. That is if Solomon even existed, which historians disagree on.
My understanding was that hexagrams were just a common panel design for circular windows in synagogues during the later Roman era, and since only synagogues had circular windows, the association was embraced. Another Jewish symbol that's much more common in Israel is the Hamsa, which is shared with Shi'a Islam and was adopted from the Carthaginian culture in the middle ages; and also the blue eye.
that S logo wasnt started by stussy, the S is actually a different design, my dad actually has a picture from the 70s and on the wall in the background there is a bunch of graffiti and that S is on there so it atleast dates back to the 70s (in the UK at least)
Saying "ohm" out loud isn't meant to help the breathing chanting as a whole is entirely about the vibration it creates and they focus on that to focus their mind on the moment. (it's always about getting your mind to focus on the moment while not actively restricting it since that won't work)
The Taijitu also represents how easily someone can change from being on the side of one thing two another. That’s why there’s a dot of white in the black side and a dot of black in the white.
That's more or less what I remember from World Religions class: the dots - the white dot of Yin inside the black Yang, and vice-versa - represent Taoism's idea that everything in the world contains the seeds of its opposite or is otherwise forever joined to its opposite. Without light, we would not have darkness (or at least we would not recognize darkness in itself), and vice-versa. Without Life, there is no Death, and without Death, there is no Life; living creatures (flora *and* fauna) feed on dead creatures, for one interpretation of this meaning. Same thing with Creation and Destruction. And to know how to heal is to know how to kill; doctors receive the same medical training that professional assassins do. And so on.
I heard that the Star and Crescent was actually an ancient standard of Byzantium, adopted by the Ottomans to show that they were heirs to the old empire of Rome.
Its turk symbol, crescent and wolf, but since their convert to Islam, their wolf god change to star, in my country is taught of that, actually the early time the prophet and his follower use the arabic word there is no god but god
@@MultiDartoyou are both wrong. The symbol of the crescent and star goes back much earlier to the kingdom of Sumer and it represents the goddess Ishtar (the star) and the god Sin (the moon). It eventually became so popular it was adopted by the Persians and the greeks and the Romans. They all minted coins with versions of this symbol for hundreds of years. When the Muslims conquerored the Persians and Romans they also minted coins with this symbol. Later it became the symbol of the ottomans and then the symbol for Islam.
The comparison with the cross and the bear trap reminds me of a Bill Hicks bit that got him banned from the Tonight Show back in the day. "I'm not goin' back there, dad! They're all wearing crosses, wtf?" Lol
There's a meaning behind the S?! My hometown starts with an S so everyone in my school called it the [town name] S. As a kid I thought it was just a thing in our town. As an adult I learned is was pretty universal, but I never questioned where it actually came from.
Mr. Terry here is when the star of david started: Star of David, Hebrew Magen David (“Shield of David”), Magen also spelled Mogen, Jewish symbol composed of two overlaid equilateral triangles that form a six-pointed star. It appears on synagogues, Jewish tombstones, and the flag of the State of Israel. The symbol-which historically was not limited to use by Jews-originated in antiquity, when, side by side with the five-pointed star, it served as a magical sign or as a decoration. In the Middle Ages the Star of David appeared with greater frequency among Jews but did not assume any special religious significance; it is found as well on some medieval cathedrals. The term Magen David, which in Jewish liturgy signifies God as the protector (shield) of David, gained currency among medieval Jewish mystics, who attached magical powers to King David’s shield just as earlier (non-Jewish) magical traditions had referred to the five-pointed star as the “seal of Solomon.” Kabbalists popularized the use of the symbol as a protection against evil spirits. The Jewish community of Prague was the first to use the Star of David as its official symbol, and from the 17th century on the six-pointed star became the official seal of many Jewish communities and a general sign of Judaism, though it has no biblical or Talmudic authority. The star was almost universally adopted by Jews in the 19th-century as a striking and simple emblem of Judaism in imitation of the cross of Christianity. The yellow badge that Jews were forced to wear in Nazi-occupied Europe invested the Star of David with a symbolism indicating martyrdom and heroism.
The cross is the symbol of christianity, because it's how Jesus made His ultimate sacrifice. It's not just: "He died that way," it's actually: "That way, He sacrificed Himself for our sins, so that we could reach the Father."
He "sacrificed himself" by being forcibly and brutally executed by the ruling state for inciting minor civil unrest in the population. I wouldn't call that much of a sacrifice.
10:10 I believe that's the symbol for Shintoism, which is primarily an early Japanese religion. Could be wrong though, only effective historical education I get is you and EU4
He's wrong about the Star of David, it does have significance, the symbol was first used roughly 1,000BCE but didn't become popular until the Middle Ages circa 1,000CE, it was on King David's shield which is why it's sometimes called the Shield of David, the two triangles represent a meaning, one points up to G-D and the other points down to Israel, they are also said to represent the Tribe of Binyamin and the Tribe of Yehuda.
10:57 -- My guess is the apple is to represent Discordianism, since one of the things that likely inspired the religion wrapped in a joke wrapped in a religion (and/or joke wrapped in a religion wrapped in a joke, it depends on the context) was the original Apple of Discord that supposedly started the Trojan War.
You should react to the channel Whatifaltist... he does an interesting mix of history/statistics videos. Recent ones included who will be great powers in the next 20 years (Sam O’Nella actually did a video on South Sudan and they are supposed to merge with two other countries and become the East African Federation by 2030). Great channel!
10:50 those are two kinds of Buddhism I believe . Left one is shinto, forgot what the middle one stands for. Didn’t play Shogun in a while, forgot them.
The spinning wheel was an important symbol of the Indian independance movement but this case I think he was referring to the Dharmachakra, the eight spoked wheel which represents the eight-fold path in Buddhism and is widely used as the symbol for that religion.
There's also something related to the wheel that is the symbol of pre-christian slavic religion and the Ankh (that thing that looks like a cross with a shoelace hoop for a head) which is the symbol for the Kemetic (Ancient Egyptian) Religion.
The crescent moon and star is Greek in origin, was picked up by the Romans and used as a symbol of Byzantium. That in turn became the symbol of Constantinople and the eastern half of the Roman Empire. When the Ottoman Empire took over Constantinople, they left the symbol as the town symbol, then hundreds of years later adopted it for their empire as Constantinople (still not renamed at the time) was the key possession of the empire. That said, a LOT of people used the crescent moon and star throughout history, and Muslim armies used it at least as early as the 13th century, well before the Ottoman Empire adopted it. The modern usage stems from the Ottoman Empire, though, with many adopting it for a sense of Islamic national identity, and this started almost as soon as the Ottoman Empire collapsed with the successor states.
Such an interesting video! I believe the cross thing for christians is from the various Old Testament prophecies about cross or about lifting the chosen one on the wood or etc -- english isn't my main language -- and making a great deal out of it. And so it was, after Jesus's death and resurrection, became something really different, so makes sense to have that symbol marking the before and the after. Still I think it was funny to see the bear trap as any kind of symbol 😂
It’s not the crusifixsion was never mentioned because the common prophecy was actually a poem about Saul getting his hands and feet bitten by wolves The cross actually represents f martyrdom and a reminded of the sacradice Jesus made to save humanity
the S has nothing to do with stusi, if you want to know you can check a video called "The Universal S" from Lemmino, he made an huge search and found what might be the origin in the 1800.
I'm sure someone mentioned it, but that second/middle one at the end looks like a torii, or the gates in Shintoism! You see them on Japanese maps all the time to mark shrines!
I think the Apple logo was a joke about how Apple is a cult. And the thing on top is a Vesica Pisces bit as a stem leaf. In fact, the bite is a Vesica Pisces bit too. To save money, Apple just put the bite on top as a leaf.
I don't know how many are wondering about the cross thingy, probably not many, but I think it's supposed to show how Jesus of Nazareth willingly gave up his perfect life to save everyone.
Star of David: Appeared in a number of ancient synagogues in Israel during and after the Second Temple period (2000 years ago) a stupid person: a random symbol
10:49 The middle symbol looks like a Japanese Torii (as in the Torii arches erected all over Japan), which I believe is identified with the Shinto religion which goes all the way back to the Feudal period (before Nippon changed their name to Japan for whatever reason). One of Shinto's core ideas is that the Emperor of Nippon/Japan is something of a demigod, and as such is infallible; for that reason, Shinto lost _huge_ numbers of worshippers after World War II, which concluded with their "god-king" Emperor Hirohito and his diplomats standing on an American naval vessel and handing his declaration of surrender to one of the American generals who had defeated his forces (thus proving that their Emperor was indeed fallible and, therefore, was not a god made flesh). I still wonder why we never see the Pentacle (the symbol representing a number of Europe's old, indigenous Pagan religions) in such videos as this one; supposedly, the five points of the Pentacle's star or pentagram represent the Five Elements, while the circle encircling the star/pentagram represents the universal or cosmic whole comprised of those Five Elements. Other accounts claim that the star/pentagram in the Pentacle represents humanity, as the star _very_ roughly evokes the human figure, with a head, two arms and two legs. The Pentacle has been seen on old, old buildings among the British Isles, buildings which may predate the Dark Ages. But very few such icons of the old Pagan religions survived Christianity's assimilation and conquest of Old Europe, lamentably. With the rise and/or resurgence of Pagan and Neo-Pagan religions in the past century or two (most notably, the emergence of several varieties of Wicca, a religious sect established around retreaded practices of Old European Witchcraft), the Pentacle has returned as a symbol of these new or retreaded religions. But it's the same Pentacle identified with the old Pagan religions centuries or millenia ago, a symbol which also endured the passage of time - ironically enough - because of the Christians misappropriating the Pentacle by identifying it with their archenemy Lucifer/the Devil/Satan, in a smear campaign with the purpose of demonizing those old Pagans and thereby rallying Christians against them; sadly, the Church's smear campaign - and with it, the "convert or die" ultimatum which the Church leveled at the Pagans - was all too successful.
Just commenting to say the top symbol you didn’t recognize was a drawing of a Torii the gates near Shinto shrines. Best remembered for their vibrant red color
To quote Dag from Assassin's Creed Valhalla, upon seeing his first monastary and questioning the cross: "And we worship Odin, but not the noose he hung himself with!"
That thing with the S we actually had that happen at my elementary school some kids complained to the principal about how it was against there religion or something like it meant the devil or something bad at least and then she did some research and walked in one day and says that it’s bull and there’s nothing wrong with it
The original symbol for Christianity was actually a fish! It represented the miracle where jesus multiplies bread and fish for his starving followers and was used as a secret code during the Roman purges of Christians
The hexagram does appear occasionally in Jewish contexts since antiquity, apparently as a decorative motif. For example, in Israel, there is a stone bearing a hexagram from the arch of the 3rd-4th century Khirbet Shura synagogue in the Galilee.
Unless I'm wrong, I think that the Wheel may have been a reference specifically to the Wheel of Life concept in Buddhism, which is a pretty big deal, and as such a pretty common symbol used by the religion.
don't worry even when we have phones we would doodle. And the "cool S" is just something kids pick up it seems since even in second grade germany we had that symbol.
Actually, the history of the “Cool S” is more complicated then “it belongs to a brand from the 90s”. Sightings of the symbol date back all the way to WWII, maybe even earlier.
I like how for a solid 30 seconds after the razor blade covered dongle he just stared into space
i felt like he was mad at me
@@itsmistyswifty6760 he wasn’t mad, just disappointed
“I’m not mad, I’m just angry”
@@walkerjohnson9355 true
I was watching this video while eating. :D Good luck I have a strong stomach :D
The middle one is the symbol for the Japanese religion Shinto, it's a majestic gate that a person passes through before entering a Japanese shrine, it's normally depicted as a red gate. 10:50
Huh... Yeah, Sam O' Nella REALLY botched those drawings, cuz that looks nothing like a Tori gate.
@@hauntedshadowslegacy2826
Hence his note on where to find him in the beginning
Torii Gate
What's the one on the right?
@@speedypichu6833 The Apple logo
4:25 there is a youtube channel called lemmino that tried to find the origin of that "S" symbol and he made a pretty interesting video about it called "the universial S"
such a good video
Literally came here to say this
Lemmino is so good
He should watch Lemmino, such a great channel.
Wow what an amazing channel, thanks for the recommendation @Tyrondor
That haunted stare you make at the grilled cheese part really made it hit me how desensitized I am to weird shit.
I think you would find lemmino interesting, he makes longer documentaries on events and other things, for example the stussey S
It's not from Stussey
His Roanoke video would be perfect for him.
@@dangerousshoes i agree
@@SonOfMuta wow really not like i watched the video or anything
@@SonOfMuta no it’s not, but that is a name for it as mentioned in the video in question.
“Nailed it” Mr. Terry on Jesus being crucified -2021
3:26 a former pastor at my family's church actually talked about it this during one of his sermons; if Jesus had been hanged, we'd probably see Christians wearing nooses around their necks.
And if he was burned at the stake we'd have the pole and fire as our symbol lol
Aren't nooses around our necks are just neckties
That would go so hard
Just wanted to inform everyone, that apparently sam finally wants to return. Before this video i wanted to look up, if there is some news from him about that and he made a post on his subreddit (the official one, which starts with slather on the honey and not the one, who shares his name). Apparently he wants to get back into making videos and he asked for ideas. the reddit post is a month old now, so maybe soon a new video will come out.
The Return Of The King memes are coming
Papa Sam is coming home??
What coincidene since Grade A under A has returned.
No way
The allfather has returned, HAIL THE LORD
The cross is the symbol of Christianity and the crucifixion.
Mr. Terry: "Nailed it!"
I was going to point that out too lol
@@Koden but now you can't. how does that make you feel?
So you watched the video, too?
@@RevanXIII
Just cause someone else did?
There's a church on every block in the US, not that impressive when it's constantly in your face.
The Cool S was not the logo for Stussey and it's been around LONG BEFORE the 90's. LEMMiNO did a video on it, the first recorded use of the S was in 1890
So it was technically from the 90s.
Knew someone would make this comment
@@TheEnabledDisabled I was just going to write this comment but he beat me to it. lol.
@@estebson of another century
@@LunaBari Still the 90s!
The middle one is the Symbol of Shintoism. You may remember it from pictures of Shinto shrines in Japan as the gates into there called "torii".
I'm pretty sure the middle symbol near there at the end is for the Shinto faith which is primarily in Japan if I'm remembering right.
Should be careful of that long neck of your’s, wouldn’t want to snap it
thats a torii arch which does indeed represent shintoism
Lol your pfp.
The star of david isnt really a religious symbol, it's more of a symbol of jewish ethnic and national identity. That's why it was used to identity jews in nazi germany and occupied territories, regardless of how secular the individual was.
If you wanted to identify a religious jewish symbol, then the menorah has been used since ancient times as such due to its association with the temple. Other options are a shofar or the lion of judah, but they're far less prevalent or widely recognised
EDIT: To anyone wondering where the jewish people got the star of david from, they took it from arabic traders who believed it was the ancient seal of Solomon. In actuality the seal of Solomon was lost to history, and nobody has the first clue what it looked like. That is if Solomon even existed, which historians disagree on.
My understanding was that hexagrams were just a common panel design for circular windows in synagogues during the later Roman era, and since only synagogues had circular windows, the association was embraced.
Another Jewish symbol that's much more common in Israel is the Hamsa, which is shared with Shi'a Islam and was adopted from the Carthaginian culture in the middle ages; and also the blue eye.
The Hebrew name for the star of David is actually shield of david
@@SamAronow hey Sam, fancy seeing you here!
@@LordDarkcyde well, it's מגן דוד, but yes, it means Shield of David.
@@SamAronow comes from the Seal of Solomon.
that S logo wasnt started by stussy, the S is actually a different design, my dad actually has a picture from the 70s and on the wall in the background there is a bunch of graffiti and that S is on there so it atleast dates back to the 70s (in the UK at least)
Yep I was drawing it on my textbooks in elementary school in the 70's in the US
Ypu should watch Lemmino's video on the matter. The S goes even before.
@@diegodeluquev1433 It's easy to draw and looks cool. It wouldn't surprise me if it was drawn on a wall in Pompeii
Saying "ohm" out loud isn't meant to help the breathing chanting as a whole is entirely about the vibration it creates and they focus on that to focus their mind on the moment. (it's always about getting your mind to focus on the moment while not actively restricting it since that won't work)
OMG! The look alone during the grilled cheese portion of the program was worth the price of admission! I'm ded 🤣😂🤣
Can't wait to see even more O'nella video reactions from you.
The joke about the S symbol did actually happen to me when I was drawing both five and six pointed stars. I just really liked drawing stars.
The Taijitu also represents how easily someone can change from being on the side of one thing two another. That’s why there’s a dot of white in the black side and a dot of black in the white.
That's more or less what I remember from World Religions class: the dots - the white dot of Yin inside the black Yang, and vice-versa - represent Taoism's idea that everything in the world contains the seeds of its opposite or is otherwise forever joined to its opposite. Without light, we would not have darkness (or at least we would not recognize darkness in itself), and vice-versa. Without Life, there is no Death, and without Death, there is no Life; living creatures (flora *and* fauna) feed on dead creatures, for one interpretation of this meaning. Same thing with Creation and Destruction. And to know how to heal is to know how to kill; doctors receive the same medical training that professional assassins do. And so on.
I heard that the Star and Crescent was actually an ancient standard of Byzantium, adopted by the Ottomans to show that they were heirs to the old empire of Rome.
Its turk symbol, crescent and wolf, but since their convert to Islam, their wolf god change to star, in my country is taught of that, actually the early time the prophet and his follower use the arabic word there is no god but god
@@MultiDartoyou are both wrong. The symbol of the crescent and star goes back much earlier to the kingdom of Sumer and it represents the goddess Ishtar (the star) and the god Sin (the moon). It eventually became so popular it was adopted by the Persians and the greeks and the Romans. They all minted coins with versions of this symbol for hundreds of years. When the Muslims conquerored the Persians and Romans they also minted coins with this symbol. Later it became the symbol of the ottomans and then the symbol for Islam.
The comparison with the cross and the bear trap reminds me of a Bill Hicks bit that got him banned from the Tonight Show back in the day. "I'm not goin' back there, dad! They're all wearing crosses, wtf?" Lol
Love Bill Hicks. So funny
There's a meaning behind the S?! My hometown starts with an S so everyone in my school called it the [town name] S. As a kid I thought it was just a thing in our town. As an adult I learned is was pretty universal, but I never questioned where it actually came from.
Damn 90s kids feel so unique. We made those same doodles in the 2000s and 2010s
Mr. Terry here is when the star of david started:
Star of David, Hebrew Magen David (“Shield of David”), Magen also spelled Mogen, Jewish symbol composed of two overlaid equilateral triangles that form a six-pointed star. It appears on synagogues, Jewish tombstones, and the flag of the State of Israel. The symbol-which historically was not limited to use by Jews-originated in antiquity, when, side by side with the five-pointed star, it served as a magical sign or as a decoration. In the Middle Ages the Star of David appeared with greater frequency among Jews but did not assume any special religious significance; it is found as well on some medieval cathedrals. The term Magen David, which in Jewish liturgy signifies God as the protector (shield) of David, gained currency among medieval Jewish mystics, who attached magical powers to King David’s shield just as earlier (non-Jewish) magical traditions had referred to the five-pointed star as the “seal of Solomon.” Kabbalists popularized the use of the symbol as a protection against evil spirits. The Jewish community of Prague was the first to use the Star of David as its official symbol, and from the 17th century on the six-pointed star became the official seal of many Jewish communities and a general sign of Judaism, though it has no biblical or Talmudic authority. The star was almost universally adopted by Jews in the 19th-century as a striking and simple emblem of Judaism in imitation of the cross of Christianity. The yellow badge that Jews were forced to wear in Nazi-occupied Europe invested the Star of David with a symbolism indicating martyrdom and heroism.
The cross is the symbol of christianity, because it's how Jesus made His ultimate sacrifice. It's not just: "He died that way," it's actually: "That way, He sacrificed Himself for our sins, so that we could reach the Father."
He "sacrificed himself" by being forcibly and brutally executed by the ruling state for inciting minor civil unrest in the population.
I wouldn't call that much of a sacrifice.
10:10 I believe that's the symbol for Shintoism, which is primarily an early Japanese religion. Could be wrong though, only effective historical education I get is you and EU4
He's wrong about the Star of David, it does have significance, the symbol was first used roughly 1,000BCE but didn't become popular until the Middle Ages circa 1,000CE, it was on King David's shield which is why it's sometimes called the Shield of David, the two triangles represent a meaning, one points up to G-D and the other points down to Israel, they are also said to represent the Tribe of Binyamin and the Tribe of Yehuda.
10:57 -- My guess is the apple is to represent Discordianism, since one of the things that likely inspired the religion wrapped in a joke wrapped in a religion (and/or joke wrapped in a religion wrapped in a joke, it depends on the context) was the original Apple of Discord that supposedly started the Trojan War.
13:11 Oh yeah. An Ohm does hold back power from being exhausted too quickly.
You should react to the channel Whatifaltist... he does an interesting mix of history/statistics videos. Recent ones included who will be great powers in the next 20 years (Sam O’Nella actually did a video on South Sudan and they are supposed to merge with two other countries and become the East African Federation by 2030). Great channel!
When Sam said he was crucified you said “nailed it”. Literally nailed to the cross lmao
10:50 those are two kinds of Buddhism I believe . Left one is shinto, forgot what the middle one stands for. Didn’t play Shogun in a while, forgot them.
The symbol on the left is the Buddhist wheel of dharma, the middle one is a Shinto torii
I've heard that the weird S has been a thing at least since the 1950s and my nephew tells me that it's still a thing in schools today.
It was a think a few years ago to I mean I saw one and Drew it because I was bord
7:55 - 8:16 get them tear drops ready
4:53 fun fact, pretty much no one actually knows where that first originated. LEMMINO did a video on that
The spinning wheel was an important symbol of the Indian independance movement but this case I think he was referring to the Dharmachakra, the eight spoked wheel which represents the eight-fold path in Buddhism and is widely used as the symbol for that religion.
The middle one on the "future" video symbols I think might be a rough shinto shrine.
Depressing feeling when the chances for a video on “Fire Diamonds” video is low because it’s science, not history.
There's also something related to the wheel that is the symbol of pre-christian slavic religion and the Ankh (that thing that looks like a cross with a shoelace hoop for a head) which is the symbol for the Kemetic (Ancient Egyptian) Religion.
Just wanted to say that I’ve enjoyed your content a lot. Please keep making more vids.
Sam: As most of you know, Jesus of Nazareth was-
Mr Terry: Nailed it
2:48
i was looking for this comment😂
The symbol predates the clothing brand, just a note there.
5:00
seeing that turtles in time arcade game in the bg made me so giddy! lovin ur content dude cant w8 to watch more : )
The crescent moon and star is Greek in origin, was picked up by the Romans and used as a symbol of Byzantium. That in turn became the symbol of Constantinople and the eastern half of the Roman Empire. When the Ottoman Empire took over Constantinople, they left the symbol as the town symbol, then hundreds of years later adopted it for their empire as Constantinople (still not renamed at the time) was the key possession of the empire.
That said, a LOT of people used the crescent moon and star throughout history, and Muslim armies used it at least as early as the 13th century, well before the Ottoman Empire adopted it. The modern usage stems from the Ottoman Empire, though, with many adopting it for a sense of Islamic national identity, and this started almost as soon as the Ottoman Empire collapsed with the successor states.
“Man there’s a lot of content” me who’s seen every Sam o Bella video and am still waiting for him to post again
That middle symbol at the end is a shinto gate from shintoisam. An old religion from japan
By the way, The Star of David was because David had a shield with that symbol on it when he fought Goliath with a slingshot and became king
But why was it in the shield?
It was'nt on the shild, he didn't have a shild when he fought gholiath and he didn't became king in this battel
Such an interesting video! I believe the cross thing for christians is from the various Old Testament prophecies about cross or about lifting the chosen one on the wood or etc -- english isn't my main language -- and making a great deal out of it. And so it was, after Jesus's death and resurrection, became something really different, so makes sense to have that symbol marking the before and the after. Still I think it was funny to see the bear trap as any kind of symbol 😂
It’s not the crusifixsion was never mentioned because the common prophecy was actually a poem about Saul getting his hands and feet bitten by wolves
The cross actually represents f martyrdom and a reminded of the sacradice Jesus made to save humanity
8:00 he is looking in your soul like
"Dont you fucking dare laugh"
the S has nothing to do with stusi, if you want to know you can check a video called "The Universal S" from Lemmino, he made an huge search and found what might be the origin in the 1800.
"Wipe with your left hand, so you can eat with your right... :O That's about pooping!" - Mr. Terry History
I'm sure someone mentioned it, but that second/middle one at the end looks like a torii, or the gates in Shintoism! You see them on Japanese maps all the time to mark shrines!
"jesus of nazareth was crucified" - "nailed it"
It took me an embarrassing amount of time to realize what you were pointing out
Mr terry you should stream enlisted to the gaming channel and great video as always btw.
I think the Apple logo was a joke about how Apple is a cult. And the thing on top is a Vesica Pisces bit as a stem leaf. In fact, the bite is a Vesica Pisces bit too. To save money, Apple just put the bite on top as a leaf.
I love how any time Sam makes a repulsive joke, Mr. Terry just looks at the screen with a face that says, "I hope there's no kids watching this"
I don't know how many are wondering about the cross thingy, probably not many, but I think it's supposed to show how Jesus of Nazareth willingly gave up his perfect life to save everyone.
Star of David: Appeared in a number of ancient synagogues in Israel during and after the Second Temple period (2000 years ago)
a stupid person: a random symbol
Sam O'Nella = Yes
Marshall would definitely love your shirt, Mr. Terry
10:49 The middle symbol looks like a Japanese Torii (as in the Torii arches erected all over Japan), which I believe is identified with the Shinto religion which goes all the way back to the Feudal period (before Nippon changed their name to Japan for whatever reason). One of Shinto's core ideas is that the Emperor of Nippon/Japan is something of a demigod, and as such is infallible; for that reason, Shinto lost _huge_ numbers of worshippers after World War II, which concluded with their "god-king" Emperor Hirohito and his diplomats standing on an American naval vessel and handing his declaration of surrender to one of the American generals who had defeated his forces (thus proving that their Emperor was indeed fallible and, therefore, was not a god made flesh).
I still wonder why we never see the Pentacle (the symbol representing a number of Europe's old, indigenous Pagan religions) in such videos as this one; supposedly, the five points of the Pentacle's star or pentagram represent the Five Elements, while the circle encircling the star/pentagram represents the universal or cosmic whole comprised of those Five Elements. Other accounts claim that the star/pentagram in the Pentacle represents humanity, as the star _very_ roughly evokes the human figure, with a head, two arms and two legs. The Pentacle has been seen on old, old buildings among the British Isles, buildings which may predate the Dark Ages. But very few such icons of the old Pagan religions survived Christianity's assimilation and conquest of Old Europe, lamentably.
With the rise and/or resurgence of Pagan and Neo-Pagan religions in the past century or two (most notably, the emergence of several varieties of Wicca, a religious sect established around retreaded practices of Old European Witchcraft), the Pentacle has returned as a symbol of these new or retreaded religions. But it's the same Pentacle identified with the old Pagan religions centuries or millenia ago, a symbol which also endured the passage of time - ironically enough - because of the Christians misappropriating the Pentacle by identifying it with their archenemy Lucifer/the Devil/Satan, in a smear campaign with the purpose of demonizing those old Pagans and thereby rallying Christians against them; sadly, the Church's smear campaign - and with it, the "convert or die" ultimatum which the Church leveled at the Pagans - was all too successful.
Just commenting to say the top symbol you didn’t recognize was a drawing of a Torii the gates near Shinto shrines. Best remembered for their vibrant red color
Around 11:00 I think the middle symbol is supposed to represent Shinto.
10:48 I believe the middle one is supposed to be a Torii gate for Shintoism.
Rather watch these videos than do actual school
speaking of that S, you should watch Lemmino's video on what you called a studdy called the Universal S
the Turtles in Time game is a real flex
Jesus: comes into focus
Mr Terry: nailed it
people during class still do the S thing when they are bored in my school
Great and insightful reaction!
To quote Dag from Assassin's Creed Valhalla, upon seeing his first monastary and questioning the cross: "And we worship Odin, but not the noose he hung himself with!"
When you have a McRib you'll more likely than not to say.
"Yeah, that's alright."
That thing with the S we actually had that happen at my elementary school some kids complained to the principal about how it was against there religion or something like it meant the devil or something bad at least and then she did some research and walked in one day and says that it’s bull and there’s nothing wrong with it
I'm surprised the video didn't talk about the fish symbol(ichthys). That has a big significant meaning in Christianity too.
"Nailed it"
I see what you did there.
I think the symbol in the middle at 11:05, should be a tori from japan.
Great video mate. Just have one thing to add......... GO PACK GO.!!
Hey man you from up north!!! Love the shirt
2:47 how cold-blooded was that pun
5:36 that’s pretty weird like that’s if the Orthodox Church picked the hammer and sickle as their symbol
I think the middle symbol was supposed to be a torii gate, for Shintoism
The original symbol for Christianity was actually a fish! It represented the miracle where jesus multiplies bread and fish for his starving followers and was used as a secret code during the Roman purges of Christians
That middle one is one of those gates that's in front of Shinto shrines in Japan i think
The origin of the crescent moon and star. It was adopted after an big battle where the crescent moon and star were reflected in an blood filled lake
The thing with the wheel and the apple logo is a Shinto Arch.
Can you please react to scandalous popes of the Middle Ages?
Dude, you are missing out on the McRib! It's the best trash food ever. I unironically love it!
I think the middle one for his second video is for Japanese Shintoism, but though I could be wrong based on the quality of the picture.
The hexagram does appear occasionally in Jewish contexts since antiquity, apparently as a decorative motif. For example, in Israel, there is a stone bearing a hexagram from the arch of the 3rd-4th century Khirbet Shura synagogue in the Galilee.
Sam O’Nella time bois!
Unless I'm wrong, I think that the Wheel may have been a reference specifically to the Wheel of Life concept in Buddhism, which is a pretty big deal, and as such a pretty common symbol used by the religion.
If I remember correctly, the stussy S actually long predates them
don't worry even when we have phones we would doodle. And the "cool S" is just something kids pick up it seems since even in second grade germany we had that symbol.
The face of sheer trauma on terry's face when sam said razor covered dildo is priceless
im a 2000s german guy and we called the S "ghetto S" in my school
The Moon and Star is actually the symbol of the cult of the Nerevarine.
Morrowind?
@@ahmadkamil3713 no shit sherlock
Wow, I never even heard of Stussy. Then again I was born the tail end of the 90s so.
That S? Yes, I know of it. Classmates bent metal paper clips into the shape of it.
10:57 the one to the left is Jainism the middle one is Shintoism and the one to the right is just apple
Actually, the history of the “Cool S” is more complicated then “it belongs to a brand from the 90s”. Sightings of the symbol date back all the way to WWII, maybe even earlier.