>>/158/
> that flag
Regarding its history, it originates from /r/hapas. I remember the guy who created it said, obviously, that it is a mixture of a European and Asian dragon, except the claw of the Asian dragon are clipped "to represent the emasculation of Asian males," i.e. some self-pity bullshit more than typical of /r/hapas. Honestly it's a pretty bad flag because it portrays the Eurasian as split in half and fractured, rather than as one monolithic and independent whole, which is the message we ought to be spreading.