Snazzy!
I don’t know where he got the medallions, but the patch is described in the Manifesto as the patch of the PCCTS (Pauperes commilitones Christi Templique Solomonici, or in English, The Poor Fellow Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon).
I presume that’s the dress uniform of this “group”.
A neighbor of mine, a Jesuit Father, has read the manifesto, and he said (aside from the stuff ripped off from the Unabomber) it “reeks of Opus Dei.” (his words).
Yeah, I got it all in my apartment-house in Berlin. An upstairs neighbor who’s a Sufi sheik and a whirling dervish to boot, and a downstairs neighbor who’s a Jesuit Father! Here’s the best part....you always see those two together downstairs at the cafe drinking oceans of Turkish coffee and chain-smoking, discussing the state of the world today, and all sorts of mystical stuff that I admit is way above my pay grade.
I just discovered him on wiki...PCCTS, “Knights Templar” order
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anders_Behring_Breivik
In his manifesto, Breivik describes himself as an economically liberal, revolutionary cultural conservative.[12] According to Oslo reporter Goran Skaalmo, Brievik considers his act to be the “ultimate gift of love” to his country, and believes he should be “applauded and celebrated” for his “marketing plan”, which he believes to be a step for himself along his path towards becoming the “perfect knight”[47].
Breivik, in his manifesto also professes a certain admiration for al Qaeda, which he lists as one of only two “successful militant organisations” due to its “superior structural adaptation.” Breivik posits further that, “If Muhammad was alive today, Usama Bin Laden would have been his second in command.” [48].
Breivik was previously a member of the Progress Party (FrP), which promotes libertarian, conservative and right-wing populist viewpoints, and its youth wing FpU. According to current FpU leader Ove Vanebo, Breivik was active early in the 2000s, but left the party in 2007 as his viewpoints became more extreme.[49] In his manifesto, he describes running for the Oslo city council in the 2003 election as a candidate of the party without being elected. This he describes as a “crossroads phase”, deciding if he would follow the path of “conventional politics” to further his goals. He eventually “lost all faith” in the Progress Party.[3]