Anonymous 12/06/2019 (Fri) 21:22:48 Id: c5a6e9 No.77526 del
There's also the re-occurring fishing rod throughout Nintendo's franchises. What's the symbolic significance to the fishing rod?

I think masons control/promote entertainment, sport, and leisure activities to use up the profane's time. Pic related: Shakespeare(Mason), Bengal tiger Shriner symbolism, "Z", 33, 3 claw marks = 3 degrees. Fishing for sport/leisure came from ancient Egypt. Movies, vidya, and music are all leisure activities. By controlling them they steer the societies' destiny. People can never develop themselves if all their leisure time gets eaten up by the Freemason Skinner box.

http://www.ancientegyptianfacts.com/ancient-egyptian-fishing.html

Fishing in ancient Egypt was one of the sports practiced by kings, princes, and commoners. There are many drawings of scenes of fishing as a hobby on the Saqqara tombs of the Old Kingdom as much as there are on the New Kingdom monuments. The Egyptian Museum in Cairo comprises numerous kinds of fishing rods and hooks of various shapes, which indicate the advance of such a sport in ancient Egypt.

Many different Egyptian Fishing artifacts such as roads and various types of hooks have been unearthed to show the versatility of their equipment. Several pictures display fishing in a recreational context. This evidence suggests that Egyptians were the first to fish for pleasure. Boating was another leisure activity of the Egyptians. The pharaohs prided themselves on their pleasure boats with multiple decks containing cabins, kitchens, dining rooms and lounges.

Fishermen used nets and fishing hooks that would not look out of place in a modern fishing tackle shop. The boats made by ancient Egyptians included components like cedar wood planking and oars, ropes of half a grass, wooden dowels and battens, and copper staples.