They're inspired by ancient Greece and Roman statues, and at that time they liked their statues to have small neat penises because they associated it with bravery and civilisation, and big swingy penises with animal-like barbarians.
Anonymous E replied with this 1 year ago, 5 minutes later, 1 hour after the original post[^][v]#1,310,863
@previous (Kook !!rcSrAtaAC)
Not mad at all. Just amazed about male body builders on steroids. Body gets big everywhere EXCEPT the penis and balls shrink.
This was created to pay homage to a concept in ancient Norwegian culture. Back then, a man's strength was measured in an intangible unit called "babyen-makt", which literally translates to "baby power". Similar to modern-day "horse power", babyen-makt was a unit that equated to the force that a baby could generate.
While this measurement was not standardized (and almost entirely figurative), it served mostly as a way of complimenting other warriors for their resilience, or describing heroic figures in lore.
The statue pictured above shows a man with a particularly significant babyen-makt, four. Men with a proposed babyen-makt of four were thought of as "in training", or "constantly persevering". These "ungdom på fire" (or sometimes "fire ungdom/mann"), are used to represent persistence and a young man's struggle for greatness/honor.
It truly is a meaningful symbol in Norwegian culture, but it is often misconstrued because of its ridiculous portrayal.
Anonymous G replied with this 1 year ago, 1 minute later, 1 hour after the original post[^][v]#1,310,870
@1,310,868 (Kook !!rcSrAtaAC)
Well it's clearly a male and he's trying to defeat four infants. You can see the one down by his foot is almost fully defeated and he's working on trying to smash the other three in order to provide "reproductive health care".