Re: American Hero
I’m sorry, I’m confused. What’s so heroic about vandalism and petty thieving of other people’s property?
Diplomatic corps for a secessionist republic of one.
This site is designed to be accessible by any web device. It looks best in those that support web standards.
This is a page from the Rad Geek People’s Daily
weblog, which has been written and maintained by Charles Johnson
at radgeek.com
since 2004.
Jim Brossert
I’m sorry, I’m confused. What’s so heroic about vandalism and petty thieving of other people’s property?
I don’t know. It probably depends on the context and the intent with which it was done.
No. Being offended doesn’t give you the right to trash or steal somebody else’s private property.
No. I generally don’t fly flags at all.
No.
Yes, and he should pay damages to the barkeep for the destruction of property.
No, not unless Jesus stood for vandalism and petty thieving. I don’t think that He did.
Jonathan Payne states “There is a reason for the laws that govern the display of our flag.” But in fact — in spite of what the media have repeatedly, inaccurately claimed — there are no laws that regulate how private citizens can or cannot display an American flag on their own property. The Federal Flag Code (4 U.S.C. §§ 4-10) offers only a set of voluntary guidelines “for the use of such civilians or civilian groups or organizations as may not be required to conform with regulations promulgated by one or more executive departments of the Government of the United States” (4 U.S.C. § 5). It has no enforcement section and assigns no penalties. Unless you are employed by the military or a government agency, there is no federal agency with the authority to impose binding regulations on how you, as a private citizen, display a flag on your own private property.