Michael Redman
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2001
- Messages
- 3,063
Yes, but this wording doesn't ban burning the flag as a form of peaceful protest, which is exactly the behavior that proponents of such a ban are generally trying to prohibit.
UserGoogol said:Since you're supposed to dispose of a flag which has been desecrated by burning it, that makes a fairly obvious symbolism for flag-burning which is not neccesarily anti-American. Disgraceful actions on the part of the government can be percieved as desecrating the purity of the flag, and therefore require the flag to be burned.
Ladewig said:The scariest part is the $250,000 fine/2-year sentence to anyone who steals a flag from federal property and then destroys the flag.
phildonnia said:I would totally support a bill making trespassing, theft and vandalism a crime.
Deal. Meet you at the peace arch.KelvinG said:If the USA passes a law against flag burning I will stand on the the Canadian side of the border and burn an American flag while people who cross through customs can watch.
Similarly, if Canada passes a law against burning our flag I will expect one of my American friends to do likewise.
In my view, it is exactly this kind of straight-jacketed thinking that has caused an increasing number of people to move away from both major political parties.Cain said:I'm not sure how any minimally sane, non-retarded person could earnestly support this amendment.
It is this very issue that causes Constitutional problems. AFAIK, there is no law which bans burning an American flag; such a law quite possibly would pass Constitutional muster. What are...but isn't a burning flag, one that has already been desecrated???
I mean, isn't it military tradition that flags that have touched the ground, be burned?
I think that a better response would be to burn a flag with thirteen stripes, and 50 stars arranged in a swastika. The police would have two options: let me get away with it, or else arrest me. And if they arrest me, then they would have to claim that this is the American flag!KelvinG If the USA passes a law against flag burning I will stand on the the Canadian side of the border and burn an American flag while people who cross through customs can watch.
Art Vandelay said:Not one good reason in the entire essay.
I disagree with you. Sure the folks you talk about are demonstrating indifference, apathy but those who burn it are showing disdain, malice. "Not letting it go in vain"? Personally I would take the indifference.daenku32 said:The forgotten thing is that people who leave their flags say, next to the road on the driveway where years of wind, sand, snow etc have battered the flags worn, ripped and faded, are actually WORSE than burning a flag.
Because at least the people who take a stand to burn it, are not letting the flag go in vain.
So, will the people who forgot their flag in certain location be punished?
Ladewig said:I wonder why this bill made it out of committee today?
Hell, I'm not a lawyer and even I recognize a loophole big enough to drive an aircraft carrier through sideways. "Your honor, my client wasn't trying to start a riot. His primary purpose was simply to make a political statement. That statement was 'I hate America'. Yes, a riot ensued, but that was not his primary purpose."Ladewig said:The good news is that many protestors will not be prosecuted because the law applies only to people "who destroy or damage a flag of the United States with the primary purpose and intent to incite or produce imminent violence or a breach of the peace."
Therefore the best way to protect flags from being burned is to pass legislation requiring every citizen to burn a flag each year. Possibly on April 15.Part of the stupidity of the measure lies in that when it is not being discussed, virtually no one burns a flag, but if the amendment came close to passing, many people would burn flags.