So the pentacle is decidedly Jewish in origin, and to a lesser degree was used in Christian mysticism that drew from Kabbalistic rituals in their magic. The western occultists are decidedly anti-christian and rely on old Hebrew magic for justification. This bleeds into tarot hard, which I now find disappointing. All this imagery of the Devil and Adam and eve, etc, mixed with Hebrew symbology is nothing but a bastardization of even older magic.

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I think a divining system of cards based on something like tantric Hinduism would be much more appropriate, but it would have to take into account and remove the hidden Jewish themes. For instance, the 22 Major arcana are arranged to represent the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet.
Jewish mysticism is fascinating, and symbolically I think it makes a lot of sense. At least it's internally consistent. But you can accomplish the same effects using other systems - Chinese turtle shell reading comes to mind. I think what matters is that it allows you to get into a less logical mode of thinking, less dependent on the inputs of the world directly in front of you. Also, tarot may take a lot from Judaism, but it really goes back to Egypt. There's a deck that I really like, but don't own yet, that's a gnostic tarot made by Miguel Connor. One of the reasons I like it (besides the awesome art) is that it symbolically excises the Jewish impositions on Christianity. The Christianity that existed before the Catholic/Ortho church was very different, and I would argue that present Christianity is more Judaism, and the original Christianity is more Greek/Egyptian, and tbh it looks like the modern version was hijacked by Jews in some kind of conspiracy. Anyways, I wouldn't have a problem with pentacles, if the context was known to be the older symbolism, but in the case of the Olympics, it seems pretty likely that its the Satanist globalists intending all the bad meanings its currently associated with.
I agree. Mostly. Yes about the Olympics. No about Egyptian tarot. Playing cards from China made their way to Egypt before being adapted. There is no evidence these cards were used to divine. The decks from Egypt made their way to Europe in the late 1300s. The Italians added Major Arcana, adding religious significance to them, like images of the pope, etc.... but these still were not used to divine. The first written use of the cards being used to divine was from Spain in the 1400s. Dividing with cards became a European folk hit for several hundred years before the French first developed a manual on divinatiry messages and created the first tarot deck. This was in the 1700s.
Finally, the modern tarot from France was adapted by members of the Golden Dawn to align more closely with Hebrew mysticism. This culminated in the rider-waite decks. The most popular ever created.