Still not funny using satanic symbols for a Christmas joke. Maybe some day you will understand. As far as your "jokes" in this thread, if anyone else posted half the stuff you have on here, they would have been banned for violating the rules.
Are you F****** kidding me?!?!
a) it's a joke.
b) it's KISS and I know you're old enough to know that KISS is little more than a cliche band, riding out a brief stint of world-shock that happend almost 40 years ago.
dont know why it didnt show...hope this works...Hahaha. Lines are always funny Mark.
Where the heck did you find that one?
Satanic salute? Based on what? Your knowledge of history is quite lacking. You must not be christian because they are taught not to be judgmental. I think it was Gandhi who said it best I like your Christ, I don't like your christians, they are so unlike your Christ.
Still not funny using satanic symbols for a Christmas joke. Maybe some day you will understand. As far as your "jokes" in this thread, if anyone else posted half the stuff you have on here, they would have been banned for violating the rules.
Popped up on my news feed......apropo
Thanks for the explanation Dela. I watched a short Doc one day on Musicians that make the sign of Satan while performing. Supposed to be tied in with the music industry.
I looked up the Dutch Amish hex signs. Quite interesting.
It kind of evolved into a art form for tourists as well.
Wiki said:In Italy and some Mediterranean cultures, when confronted with unfortunate events, or simply when these events are mentioned, the sign of the horns may be given to ward off bad luck. It is also used traditionally to counter or ward off the "evil eye" (malocchio). With fingers down, it is a common apotropaic gesture, by which superstitious people seek protection in unlucky situations (It is a more Mediterranean equivalent of knocking on wood). Thus for example the President of the Italian Republic Giovanni Leone shocked the country when, while in Naples during an outbreak of cholera, he shook the hands of patients with one hand while with the other behind his back he made the corna. This act was well documented by the journalists and photographers who were right behind him, a fact that had escaped President Leone's mind in that moment. In Italy, one can also "touch iron" (tocca ferro) or touch one's nose. Males in Italy and some other countries may grab their testicles when confronted by bad luck; however, this is considered more vulgar.
In Peru one says contra (against). In the Dominican Republic the expression is zafa, said against curses known as fukú. All of these gestures are meant to conjure supernatural protection
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BTW, if you're from Tennessee, I'm sorry, but this song is hilarious.