You heard it here first. The theme for Sun and moon is politics.
During the Safavid era, the lion and sun stood for the two pillars of society, the state and the Islamic religion. It was also a symbol of royalty.
Moonbat is a term used in United States politics as a pejorative political epithet referring to progressives or leftists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonbat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion_and_Sun
>everything in Pokemon has some deep, complex meaning
You are the worst fucking people.
>>26353288
somebody's been spending a little too much time on /pol/
Time to leave the Chinese Super Monster Pocket board and get some fresh air, dude
No, it's just Balinese.
Barong is the white-haired lion of light, whose fur is adorned with precious stones and gilded mirrors to reflect the sun's rays against his enemies. He fights Rangda, the witch queen of the demons, who take the form of flying vampires missing their lower extremities who come at night to steal men's lives.
>>26355062
>Balinese mythology
This makes me happy
Gen 5 already did the politics thing with its legendaries. Try again.
The biggest political issue in Hawaii is the legitimacy of Hawaii's statehood. There's a battle between the people that believe that Hawaii was wrongfully annexed, and the people who'd like to just leave it the way it is because they're comfortable with lifestyle.
But this issue has no business being anywhere near a Pokemon game, especially in the perspective of the Japanese
>>26353333
If we're doing /pol/ themes, I hope there's a pearl Harbor in the game, and it gets attacked by team rocket flying on fearows.