
To Those Who Want To Burn the Flag, just ask permission...
Does the first Amendment gives us the right to desecrate the American flag?
Or is the flag a sacred symbol of our nation, deserving protection by law?
Tough call?
"The Solution"
For those who want to light Old Glory on fire, stomp all over it, or spit on
it to make some sort of "statement," I say let them do it. But under one
condition: they MUST get permission from three sponsors.
First, you need permission of a war veteran. Perhaps a Marine who fought at
Iwo Jima? The American flag was raised over Mount Surabachi upon the bodies
of thousands of dead buddies. Each night spent on Iwo meant half of everyone
you knew would be dead tomorrow, a coin flip away from a bloody end upon a patch
of sand your mother couldn't find on a map. Or maybe ask a Vietnam vet who spent
years tortured in a small, filthy cell unfit for a dog. Or a Korean War soldier
who helped rescue half a nation from Communism. Or a Desert Storm veteran who
repulsed a bloody dictator from raping and pillaging an innocent country. That
flag represented your mother and father, your sister and brother, your friends,
neighbors, and everyone at home. I wonder what they would say if someone asked
them permission to burn the American flag?
Next, you need a signature from an immigrant. Their brothers and sisters may
still languish in their native land, often under tyranny, poverty and misery.
Or maybe they died on the way here, never to touch our shores. Some have seen
friends and family get tortured and murdered by their own government for daring
to do things we take for granted every day. For those who risked everything
simply for the chance to become an American ... what kind of feelings do they
have for the flag when they Pledge Allegiance the first time? Go to a
naturalization ceremony and see for yourself, the tears of pride, the thanks,
the love and respect of this nation, as they finally embrace the American flag
as their own. Ask one of them if it would be OK to tear up the flag.
Lastly, you should get the signature of a mother. Not just any mother. You
need a mother of someone who gave their life for America. It doesn't even
have to be from a war.It could be a cop. Or a fireman. Maybe a Secret Service
or NSA agent. Then again, it could be a common foot soldier as well.
When that son or daughter is laid to rest, their family is given one gift by
the American people; an American flag. Go on. I dare you. Ask that mother to
spit on her flag. I wonder what the founding fathers thought of the American
flag as they drafted the Declaration of Independence? They knew this act would
rag young America into war with England, the greatest power on earth. They also
knew failure meant more than just a disappointment. It meant a noose snugly
stretched around their necks. But they needed a symbol, something to inspire
the new nation. Something to represent the seriousness, the purpose and
conviction that we held our new idea of individual freedom. Something worth
living for. Something worth dying for. I wonder how they'd feel if someone
asked them permission to toss their flag in a mud puddle?
Away from family, away from the precious shores of home, in the face of
overwhelming odds and often in the face of death, the American flag inspires
those who believe in the American dream, the American promise, the American
vision...Americans who don't appreciate the flag don't appreciate this nation.
Those who appreciate this nation appreciate the American flag. Those who fought,
fought for that flag. Those who died, died for that flag. And those who love
America, love that flag. And defend it.
So if you want to desecrate the American flag, before you spit on it or before
you burn it ...I have a simple request. Just ask permission.
Not from the Constitution.
Not from some obscure law.
Not from the politicians or the pundits.
Instead, ask those who defended our nation so that we may be free today. Ask
those who struggled to reach our shores so that they may join us in the American dream.
And ask those who clutch a flag in place of their sacrificed sons and daughters, given
to this nation so that others may be free.
For we cannot ask permission from those who died wishing they could, just once ...
or once again ... see, touch or kiss the flag that stands for our nation, the United
States of America...
Author Unknown
Number of browsers since 21 Jun 99:
[USMC]
[USN]
[USC NROTC Alumni]

Revised: --Thursday, 17-Feb-2005 14:03:22 MST
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