The amount of people who care about the anthem thing is staggering.
If they wanna stand, let em stand. If they don't, let em kneel.
There are bigger issues at hand here
Yeah, Puerto Rico. We know.
The amount of people who care about the anthem thing is staggering.
If they wanna stand, let em stand. If they don't, let em kneel.
There are bigger issues at hand here
They enjoy a close relationship, sure, but I would stop short of labeling it an obligatorily symbiotic one. There’s a conduit between the two but it doesn’t necessarily have to be bi-directional. Of course, in case it wasn’t abundantly clear from my initial post on the topic, I’m viewing this through a kind of metaphysical lens.
I guess it does if you have designs to aggressively extrapolate beyond authorial intent.
Agitation of the mind seems markedly different than persuasively enlightening it. That’s the distinction I’m trying to make here. The instances of social injustice you highlighted are real and critically threaten our national ethos, but the cultural process I’m referring to is the simple, entirely innocuous act of acknowledging some pretty basic principles of community and country. These aren’t values designed to hurt anyone.
They enjoy a close relationship, sure, but I would stop short of labeling it an obligatorily symbiotic one. There’s a conduit between the two but it doesn’t necessarily have to be bi-directional. Of course, in case it wasn’t abundantly clear from my initial post on the topic, I’m viewing this through a kind of metaphysical lens.
I guess it does if you have designs to aggressively extrapolate beyond authorial intent.
Agitation of the mind seems markedly different than persuasively enlightening it. That’s the distinction I’m trying to make here. The instances of social injustice you highlighted are real and critically threaten our national ethos, but the cultural process I’m referring to is the simple, entirely innocuous act of acknowledging some pretty basic principles of community and country. These aren’t values designed to hurt anyone.
I'm eagerly anticipating your postfascist manifesto, Hawk, so I can see how you acknowledge your obvious understanding of structural problems of race in America ("instances of social injustice ... [that] critically threaten our national ethos") with an explaination of why the subject of those injustices should feel compelled to participate in "entirely innocuous celebrations of community and country." I really want you to square that circle for me, because I think it would be fascinating reading.
The massive outbreak of flag-****ing post 9/11 would seem to me to have led to a number of people being hurt.
Which is why, I guess, I'm careful about giving a blanket exclusion for that type of thing being necessarily benign.
Plenty of folks have said that the US flag symbolizes, for them, not only or not even "community and country", but also/mostly/entirely a culture of domestic and/or international oppression. You're either willfully erasing their feelings in favor of your (self-admittedly sketchy) universalist metaphysics of the state; or else you're being disingenuous to serve some ouroborous flag-waving critique of dissent.
"A few other entertainers began to pick up on that too and they hollar'd. But I guess I was the loud the biggest mouth in town.""
Man I would have loved to have seen what the diehards would say about Sinatra then if that happened today. NVM I already know.
I'm not erasing their feelings, I'm just categorizing them somewhere between sorta unreasonable and entirely misplaced.
And they're categorically different from the Charlotte/Baltimore/StL protests that you say you supported how, exactly.
I would suggest those (unspecific) events probably had more to do with nature of 9/11 and less to do with blindly dying on the flag (or ****ing, as it were).
Who/what was/were the target(s) of the protests in Charlotte?
Who/what are the target(s) in this instance of ... erm ... civil disobedience?
What do you attribute falling NFL ratings to if it's not some combination of domestic violence, brain damage, and political activism?
But, er, are you denying that there was--regardless of perceived correlation--a massive outbreak of flag-****ing that was roughly contemporaneous with, say, the Iraq war? And your contention would be that there was no connection at all between that and American foreign policy?
Uh, racial inequality, particularly as expressed in law enforcement and the judicial system. And, uh, racial inequality, particularly as expressed in law enforcement and the judicial system?