BURN
THAT FLAG
For REAL ESTATE and RE-LOCATION
information WE CAN HELP!: Written by Tom Adkins What do we do about people who
want to burn the American flag? You know...those folks who want to stomp all over it, or spit on it to make some sort of "statement." Some say the first Amendment gives us the right to desecrate the American flag.
Others want to make it illegal. This is a tough one. What should we do? I can solve this one easily. I believe we should have a simple requirement. Let flag desecration be legal, but you have to have three sponsors who will
give you written permission. Those sponsors should be from a panel of experts who might be considered "qualified" to give such permission. First, you need a signature of a war veteran. How about a Marine who fought at
Iwo Jima? The men who raised that flag over Iwo Jima did so on the bodies of thousands of dead Americans, who gave their lives so a few could raise the flag in defiant claim of that last island in a long, bloody march to defeat
the Japanese. What did those Marines think about the flag as they watched their comrades get slaughtered? Every battle with the Japanese was horrific. Each day meant half of everyone you knew would be dead tomorrow. Your own future
was a coin flip away from a bloody death in a place your family couldn't pronounce. Or you could ask a Vietnam vet who spent years in a POW prison, tortured in small, filthy cells unfit for a dog. Or Korean War soldiers who
rescued half a nation from communism, or the Desert Storm warriors who repulsed a bloody dictator from raping and pillaging an innocent country, to find people from a foreign land kiss our flag as we drove through their streets.
Next, you need a signature of an immigrant.
Preferably one who left their family behind. Their brothers and sisters languish in their native land, often subject to tyranny, poverty and failure, while America offers freedom and prosperity. Some have seen friends and family
be tortured and murdered by their own government for daring to do many things we take for granted every day. Many give their lives in the struggle just to touch our shores, even as America turns its back and returns them to face
persecution once again in their native land. 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 to it for 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 flag of our nation as their own. Then, walk up and ask one of them if it would
be OK to spit on the flag. Last, you need a signature from someone living in a foreign land who cannot get here. Say, Rwanda. Or maybe Bosnia. Maybe even Haiti. You might have to move fast, as they flee oppressors who attack
them with machete's or shoot at them randomly in a marketplace. I'm sure they will never question your sanity as they duck for cover. They knew failure of independence meant more
than just a disappointment. It meant a noose would be snugly stretched around their necks. I wonder how they'd feel if someone asked their permission to toss the flag in a mud puddle? In the absence of family, the absence of the
precious shores of home, in the face of overwhelming odds and often in the face of death itself, the American flag inspires those who believe in the American dream, the American promise, the American vision... Americans who don't
appreciate the flag are usually those who don't appreciate this nation. And those who appreciate this nation appreciate the American flag. So if you would, before you desecrate the American flag, before you spit on it, before you
ignore it or despise it...please ask permission. Not from the constitution. Not from some obscure law. Not from the politicians or the pundits. Please ask permission from those who founded the nation. Please ask those who
defended our shores so that we may be free today. Please ask those who fought to reach our shores so that they may partake in the American dream. And then, please 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...the greatest nation on earth. |