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Patriots and the lapel pin

By MIKE JONES Associate Editor on May 18, 2012, at 3:23 PM  Updated on 5/18 at 3:23 PM



JONEZIN

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The Republicans are dredging up the worn-out Rev. Wright controversy of 2008 again this election year. Can birth certificates and religious choice be far behind?

Another of the oldie-but-no-so-goodies also has taken on life. Email accounts are being flooded, again, with the “story” of then-candidate Sen. Barack Obama’s alleged statement on “Meet the Press” in 2008 about not placing his hand over his heart during the Pledge of Alegiance , wanting to scrap the National Anthem and replace it with “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing” and the popular rumor of his reluctance to wear an American flag lapel pin.

I won’t go into great detail about this email. It’s easily debunked at Snopes.com. You can check for yourself. I’ll simply say that it is a lie. Obama wasn’t even on “Meet the Press” on the Sunday the email says he was.

But, back to this lapel pin business.

When did wearing an American flag on your lapel become the litmus test for patriotism? Are we all supposed to wear them all the time?

I took a very unscientific, eyeball poll Friday during lunch at Billy’s on the Square. It was Mayfest and the place was crowded with folks other than downtown regulars. So, I figured it was a pretty good cross-section of the populace.

I didn’t see one, not one, American flag lapel pin in the joint. Oddly enough, I also didn’t see anyone wearing an American flag print shirt either. So maybe my poll sample was slightly skewed.

By the way, most of the folks who insist on lapel pins and rail about the flag being desecrated often are the very same people who wear those shirts or hats or pants or place in their rear car windows pillows with the flag on them.

Here is what flag etiquette says, in part:

• The flag should not be used as a drapery, or for covering a speakers desk, draping a platform, or for any decoration in general.

• The flag should never be used for any advertising purpose. It should not be embroidered, printed or otherwise impressed on such articles as cushions, handkerchiefs, napkins, boxes, or anything intended to be discarded after temporary use. Advertising signs should not be attached to the staff or halyard
• The flag should not be used as part of a costume or athletic uniform, except that a flag patch may be used on the uniform of military personnel, fireman, policeman and members of patriotic organizations.
That seems to take in shirts, pants and pillows, but nothing about lapel pins.
Wearing a lapel pin is a nice gesture for those who want to wear one. I have no problem with that. But don’t insist that everyone wear one to prove his or her patriotism.
I don’t recall my dad, who fought in World War II in Gen. Patton’s 3rd Army, wearing one. No one ever questioned his patriotism.
Can’t we drop the pin, birth certificate, patriotism, etc debate and get on with more important issues?



JONEZIN

Lessons

Well, if at first you don’t succeed …

Last week, Rep. Dennis Johnson, R-Duncan, uttered an ethnic slur on the floor ...

NBC is gong to interview Jerry Sandusky. Does anyone care?

When NBC airs its exclusive interview with convicted child molester Jerry Sandusky next week I hope time is taken to also ...

Tough times

All together now, awwwwwww.

Poor (not financially poor) Mark Zuckerberg is $7.2 billion less wealthy.

That’s billion ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Mike Jones

918-581-8332
Email

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NEWS FEED

105 Comments

Graduation

3 days ago