Cali School changes mind after complaints
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1449
- Joined: Wed Apr 14, 2010 6:54 pm
- Location: Why no Krom I didn't know you can have 100 characters in this box.
Re:
This is about foreigners wanting to redefine the United States to suit their needs.null0010 wrote:This is about foreigners, not how to define the government of the United States.
- Foil
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4900
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
- Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
- Contact:
Re:
Back to the original topic:
My downstairs neighbor is proud of both his nation and his heritage; he flies both the U.S. flag and the Puerto Rican flag equally. Yet his family has been harassed for celebrating Puerto Rican holidays.
Conversely, do you think it's disrespectful for a U.S. Citizen living overseas to proudly fly the U.S. flag?
What do you mean by "too proudly"?vision wrote:One of my pet peeves is people flying their nation's flag too proudly in the USA. I'm not even a patriot; I just think it's disrespectful.
My downstairs neighbor is proud of both his nation and his heritage; he flies both the U.S. flag and the Puerto Rican flag equally. Yet his family has been harassed for celebrating Puerto Rican holidays.
Conversely, do you think it's disrespectful for a U.S. Citizen living overseas to proudly fly the U.S. flag?
re: flags
I don't think it's \"disrespectful\" to fly a flag, but I do think it's tacky. It's like whoever's flying the American flag in this country has forgotten where they live, so they had to string up Old Glory to remind them where their land is. I've never really understood the concept of national pride, since people can't choose to be born in the USA. The only people who I've ever thought could fly the flag without being silly/tacky are veterans.
I don't think it's \"disrespectful\" to fly a flag, but I do think it's tacky. It's like whoever's flying the American flag in this country has forgotten where they live, so they had to string up Old Glory to remind them where their land is. I've never really understood the concept of national pride, since people can't choose to be born in the USA. The only people who I've ever thought could fly the flag without being silly/tacky are veterans.
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
- Will Robinson
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 10136
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am
Re:
It's a double edged sword, without it we're screwed. Too much of it and everyone else is screwed.null0010 wrote:..I've never really understood the concept of national pride,...
We could make good use of a little more right now.
- Foil
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4900
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
- Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
- Contact:
Re:
You misunderstand the motivation here, I think.null0010 wrote:...I do think it's tacky.
...I've never really understood the concept of national pride, since people can't choose to be born in the USA...
It's not that folks are "proud of where they were born" (you're right, that would be unbelievably tacky). Rather, the motive is to display what one has chosen to support.
It's analogous to the reason I choose to wear my favorite team's jersey on game days. I'm not wearing it to say I'm somehow a member of the team; I'm simply indicating the team/player I'm supporting/cheering.
So I'm really tacky when I say The United States is the best country and Texas is the best state? Darn, I'm tacky for life, I guess.Foil wrote: It's not that folks are "proud of where they were born" (you're right, that would be unbelievably tacky). Rather, the motive is to display what one has chosen to support.
Re:
Yeah, I don't get that either.Foil wrote:You misunderstand the motivation here, I think....
It's analogous to the reason I choose to wear my favorite team's jersey on game days. I'm not wearing it to say I'm somehow a member of the team; I'm simply indicating the team/player I'm supporting/cheering.
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
- Foil
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4900
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
- Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
- Contact:
Re:
No. That's not what I said.Isaac wrote:So I'm really tacky when I say The United States is the best country and Texas is the best state? Darn, I'm tacky for life, I guess.Foil wrote: It's not that folks are "proud of where they were born" (you're right, that would be unbelievably tacky). Rather, the motive is to display what one has chosen to support.
You're saying, "I've chosen to support the U.S. and Texas, because I think they are the best."
IMO, that's quite different from, "I'm proud because I was born here", which is tacky simply because people don't control or earn their birthplace.
- Foil
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4900
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
- Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
- Contact:
Re:
No problem, you don't have to understand it. Sports fandom certainly can seem odd.null0010 wrote:Yeah, I don't get that either.Foil wrote:...I choose to wear my favorite team's jersey on game days. I'm not wearing it to say I'm somehow a member of the team; I'm simply indicating the team/player I'm supporting/cheering.
Re:
I respect your right to fly a flag as well and I'm sure as heck not going to stop you or even try to stop you from doing so. I'm just saying I think it's silly.woodchip wrote:Null, we respect your right to not fly a flag and you will notice we do not call it "tacky" for you not doing so.
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
- Will Robinson
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 10136
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am
Re:
I think, since you say you don't get it, that you shouldn't refer to it as silly. You are mocking what you don't understand and that isn't a smart place to be. Just because you don't have a reason to do something doesn't mean there is no good reason for it to be done. It comes off as arrogant if you don't have a reason other than you don't do it.null0010 wrote:I respect your right to fly a flag as well and I'm sure as heck not going to stop you or even try to stop you from doing so. I'm just saying I think it's silly.woodchip wrote:Null, we respect your right to not fly a flag and you will notice we do not call it "tacky" for you not doing so.
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13743
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
I listened to the school official last night and you're all missing the point of 'why' he banned the flag on this kid's bike. It was a safety issue. Did any of you take a look at how the kid was displaying the flag? He had a little flag pole with it's little flag strapped onto the back of his bicycle.
Well, about the time this kid wiped out on his bike, jammed the stick into his eye and pithed his little brain on his little toy flag pole while riding on school property, you'd see no end of lawsuits and parents yelling and screaming why this kid was allowed to ride his bike with a hazardous stick pointing off of it.
Remember the stick shift on the old Stingray bike? That was banned for that very reason, impaling hazard.
http://bicycleapparel.com/Stingray.html
Well, about the time this kid wiped out on his bike, jammed the stick into his eye and pithed his little brain on his little toy flag pole while riding on school property, you'd see no end of lawsuits and parents yelling and screaming why this kid was allowed to ride his bike with a hazardous stick pointing off of it.
Remember the stick shift on the old Stingray bike? That was banned for that very reason, impaling hazard.
http://bicycleapparel.com/Stingray.html
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1449
- Joined: Wed Apr 14, 2010 6:54 pm
- Location: Why no Krom I didn't know you can have 100 characters in this box.
Re:
Guess you didn't read the article first posted did you.tunnelcat wrote:I listened to the school official last night and you're all missing the point of 'why' he banned the flag on this kid's bike. It was a safety issue. Did any of you take a look at how the kid was displaying the flag? He had a little flag pole with it's little flag strapped onto the back of his bicycle.
Well, about the time this kid wiped out on his bike, jammed the stick into his eye and pithed his little brain on his little toy flag pole while riding on school property, you'd see no end of lawsuits and parents yelling and screaming why this kid was allowed to ride his bike with a hazardous stick pointing off of it.
Remember the stick shift on the old Stingray bike? That was banned for that very reason, impaling hazard.
http://bicycleapparel.com/Stingray.html
I guess the safety issue was racially motivated. Seeing how the boy was being threaten with violence.Denair United School District Superintendent, Edward Parraz, says that the reason Cody Alecia was told to remove the flag is because flying the American flag might cause “racial tensions“.
The superintendent plans to now focus on those who are making the threats and not the flag.
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/wor ... 59308.htmlCody Alicea says that he does this to be patriotic and to honor veterans, like his own grandfather, Robert. He has had the flag on his bike for two months but on Monday he was asked told to take it down. Superintendent Edward Parraz said that by asking Cody Alicea to hide the U.S. flag he was trying his best to dismiss the racial tensions that Cody Alicia’s act was evoking in the school campus.Edward Parraz further added that of late students have been coming to him reporting of this incident of the flag and that the flag was no longer allowed on the school property. It is pretty evident that Cody Alicea’s simple act of showing his respect towards the veterans in his family has not been quite simply.