PLU'RAL, adjective [Latin pluralis, from plus, pluris] - "more" + MORE, adjective [Latin magis] - "greater in quality"
Allegory for ONE out of ALL aka form (life) out of flow (inception towards death) aka choice (evaluation) out of balance (value) etc. Comprehending this then allows further comprehension about the ONEness of ALL (energy).
TLDR: We can use symbols for both good and bad, and thus these symbols are loaded with both kinds of ambiguous meaning and should not be taken either as proof of total innocence or as proof of total malfeasance.
God uses 13 to mean what goes beyond 12: 12 is God (3) working with man (4) and 13 is superabundance of this harmony, as with the 12 tribes counted as 13 (Joseph broken into Manasseh and Ephraim), a pattern on which the 13 colonies followed. The devil uses 13 to mean disharmony, misfortune, symbolized by Judas at the Last Supper of 13; but God willed for Judas to betray Jesus so that the sins of mankind would be atoned for, so the devil's plans are always lesser and incomplete compared to God's. The US uses 13 to refer to itself with these mixed motives. For Q followers, I've always seen 17 primary feathers on each wing, but I don't think this was ever formally specified.
The glory (yellow/gold here) and cloud (white/silver) represent God surrounding us, but this can also be taken to refer to any counterfeit god (and the Vatican claims the same colors and gets the same dichotomy). The constellation represents that we humans have heavenly destiny like the angels, and it being new indicates that the heavens are being shaken; these are generally statements of pride. The stars are pentagrams forming a larger hexagram, and both symbols are broadly used around the world although the hexagram has had specially association with Judaism (but only recently, not at the time this was adopted in the 1780s). Pentagrams and hexagrams were not originally associated with physical stars, which were originally conceived of as balls ("kochavim") of light, like the sun and moon; instead polygrams were symbols of Pythagorean geometry that originally took root to mean health and hygiene, though that symbolism is largely lost now except insofar as angels guard health.
"E pluribus unum" is a quote from Virgil and does not mean the preservation of individuality but actually its loss, as many colors of foods are crushed together into a salad and become one new color without individuality. The other quotes on the seal are "annuit coeptis" and "novus ordo seclorum" and are also from Virgil with a meaning relatively contrary to their common mainstream meanings.
The bald eagle is an unclean scavenger (the Gadsden rattlesnake is also unclean) to indicate readiness for predation in war. It is splayed primarily for artistic purposes rather than indicating awkwardness, though it's true this can be regarded as frontal aggressiveness.
I have not heard of the blue as signifying vigilanteism, although it can express justice as it means heavenly order (and the source of the constellatory order). Rather, at this time Lynch law was not vigilante but an expression of the creativity of formal law to handle any kind of criminality. I'm told the 7 white bars are also an inverted menorah in reference to the Revolutionary War funding by Hayim Solomon.
The talons indicate readiness for war or peace at any time, as the Declaration says. Arrows can also represent children (as the five Rothschild arrows do), but that would just be the states again, which can be either arrows in a quiver or fruits on a branch.
you know, the number of states when the US was founded.
Allegory for ONE out of ALL aka form (life) out of flow (inception towards death) aka choice (evaluation) out of balance (value) etc. Comprehending this then allows further comprehension about the ONEness of ALL (energy).
Sleight of hand: "ONE for ALL and ALL for ONE".
TLDR: We can use symbols for both good and bad, and thus these symbols are loaded with both kinds of ambiguous meaning and should not be taken either as proof of total innocence or as proof of total malfeasance.
God uses 13 to mean what goes beyond 12: 12 is God (3) working with man (4) and 13 is superabundance of this harmony, as with the 12 tribes counted as 13 (Joseph broken into Manasseh and Ephraim), a pattern on which the 13 colonies followed. The devil uses 13 to mean disharmony, misfortune, symbolized by Judas at the Last Supper of 13; but God willed for Judas to betray Jesus so that the sins of mankind would be atoned for, so the devil's plans are always lesser and incomplete compared to God's. The US uses 13 to refer to itself with these mixed motives. For Q followers, I've always seen 17 primary feathers on each wing, but I don't think this was ever formally specified.
The glory (yellow/gold here) and cloud (white/silver) represent God surrounding us, but this can also be taken to refer to any counterfeit god (and the Vatican claims the same colors and gets the same dichotomy). The constellation represents that we humans have heavenly destiny like the angels, and it being new indicates that the heavens are being shaken; these are generally statements of pride. The stars are pentagrams forming a larger hexagram, and both symbols are broadly used around the world although the hexagram has had specially association with Judaism (but only recently, not at the time this was adopted in the 1780s). Pentagrams and hexagrams were not originally associated with physical stars, which were originally conceived of as balls ("kochavim") of light, like the sun and moon; instead polygrams were symbols of Pythagorean geometry that originally took root to mean health and hygiene, though that symbolism is largely lost now except insofar as angels guard health.
"E pluribus unum" is a quote from Virgil and does not mean the preservation of individuality but actually its loss, as many colors of foods are crushed together into a salad and become one new color without individuality. The other quotes on the seal are "annuit coeptis" and "novus ordo seclorum" and are also from Virgil with a meaning relatively contrary to their common mainstream meanings.
The bald eagle is an unclean scavenger (the Gadsden rattlesnake is also unclean) to indicate readiness for predation in war. It is splayed primarily for artistic purposes rather than indicating awkwardness, though it's true this can be regarded as frontal aggressiveness.
I have not heard of the blue as signifying vigilanteism, although it can express justice as it means heavenly order (and the source of the constellatory order). Rather, at this time Lynch law was not vigilante but an expression of the creativity of formal law to handle any kind of criminality. I'm told the 7 white bars are also an inverted menorah in reference to the Revolutionary War funding by Hayim Solomon.
The talons indicate readiness for war or peace at any time, as the Declaration says. Arrows can also represent children (as the five Rothschild arrows do), but that would just be the states again, which can be either arrows in a quiver or fruits on a branch.
The Pentacle is also a symbol of Babylonian magic.
Why is it in the American flag?
You guess?