Its a really important symbol in Mongolian religious life and personal and national identity. Its up there next to Khokh Tingri and it means eternal balance and that energy never ends it just keeps moving through more forms and directions, and the way we usually try to draw it is as multi directional like not two dimensional but even four dimensional if possible, though usually a representation of three dimensionality is about the best that can be done, though the fourth dimension might be represented by the color.
As for Khokh Tingri, this represents the idea of freedom from arbitrary restrictions and the right to personal authority over what is ours in our lives, which is usually not all we survey but it usually extends to the extent of all our extremities at least.
It doesn't mean that we can live any way we want to be we have a right to educate on the consequences of our choices and choose for ourselves what is the best balance for our own natures and goals.
Now like all gods and goddesses I always say that some individual represented this idea but I don't want it to get lost that the idea or energy has its own existence nor separate that there are people attached to the embodiment of these ideas.
Now, because we have practiced personal choice in our lives for such a long history I want to say that choosing the swastika and jews not liking a person typically are not cause and effect and though they might be correlated jews don't like us even when we don't know our culture, and even if we decide not to talk about it, we can't decide for them how to behave, we can only express what consequences we think people should get for the individual activities that they engage in against our concept of personal freedom.
Freedom also is a concept that the US doesn't own, and lately I'm not sure it even tries to represent anymore, especially considering the last election. And that guy at the voting place was pretty clear about his intention to have me evicted from my place of dwelling for the act of voting in this "free country". Our way of life has replaced freedom at least in Indiana but from the sounds of things its probably the case in other places around the nation as well. Sometimes people talk about the right to our way of life or defending our way of life but I'm pretty sure they understand in a very upfront way that they are talking about the privileges of some at the expense of others, and to grant "rights" to these others is to take a direct material loss to themselves.
Anyway, Mongol genetic types tend to like the rougher parts of the world because the kind of people I talked about in that last paragraph usually dont, but sometimes those people get so angry with the existance of any other kind of people that they don't even leave us these kinds of places, and they want to make them truly uninhabitable or fill them with things that don't need to be there, and for a lot of us these days we are hearing the call to engage, and I get this lecture every time I think maybe I should just get a ger and some sheep. That I will get all the way out there and then it will be clear to me what I felt I need to be doing here, and its easy to earn or save enough money for a ger and some sheep here, but really hard to buy a ticket back on the proceeds of sheep.
*I was just watching a guy on youtube explaining the mongolian swastika by the name of HotZetiGer who has a number of videos on these topics, and frankly I think more people should see more mongols talking and being visible more often anyway, just as a matter of principal, but also because it makes that conversation about seeing white people a little easier to get through*