The use of one or another symbol by someone does not mean that the symbol will be associated with it. Unfortunately, this is the case in modern society. See how many five-pointed stars (it has become a symbol of combs) are on the American flag. It's absolutely silly to associate a symbol that has existed for hundreds of years with someone who has painted it somewhere on the gate. I mean figuratively. and eg the raised right. Few cause more uproar in our society than this gesture. Scandalized, damned, automatically associated with Nazism. This is almost always the reaction of media cesspools and pseudo-human rights defenders. The Roman salute is a gesture, part of nonverbal communication, in which the right hand is raised to the sky, the fingers are outstretched and the palm is facing the ground. In some versions it was possible to use a Roman salute with the palm facing the sky. Although the name of the salute is derived from ancient Rome, it is very likely to have roots in some of the older cultures. But try to use it today, and the contemporary Gestapo, along with human and inhuman human rights defenders, will confuse you. Personally, I think (I don't have tattoos myself, although I don't mind at all - quite the contrary, but I'm almost 60 and it's starting to be visible on my skin) that everyone can do what they want with their body. Nobody cares. And I can have the symbol I want on my body as well.