TOO BUSY FOR NATIONAL ANTHEM!
Thursday, October 6th, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
TOO BUSY FOR NATIONAL ANTHEM!
I’ve always looked on honoring the flag and standing for the
national anthem as a basic premise that connotes a commitment to protect our
freedoms guaranteed to us under our constitution. It’s also a symbol of
reverence for our soldiers who protect us throughout the world. It’s never occurred to me not to stand as the
national anthem is being played. I guess
I’m just an old fashioned coot that has allowed current trends to pass me by. It
apparently is just not “cool” or “hip” to celebrate freedom, and to honor those
who protect us.
I guess I have never been all that “cool.” I was one of those young kids who didn’t
dodge the draft, and even though I was married with a child on the way and past
draft age, I still volunteered to serve in the military. Initially in the Army
and then 12 years in the National Guard. I was a lawyer, but enlisted in the
infantry. I still have and wear my dog tags given to me by the Army back in
1966. But I wasn’t all that special. Thousands of young men did the same. It
just seemed like the right thing to do.
But I guess being patriotic is passé in this day and
age. It’s not just many overpaid NFL
football players who can’t seem to take a few moments to honor those who serve
and protect our country. Have you been
to a college or pro game recently? Just
take a look around you while the Star -Spangled Banner is playing. As sports writer John Branch wrote in The New
York Times this week, maybe we ought to turn the cameras around on the
fans. “Those who have spent a lot of
time in stadiums and arenas know that they are rarely sanctuaries of patriotic
conformity and decorum.”
Go to LSU’s Tiger Stadium on a Saturday night or venture
into the SuperDome for a Sunday afternoon Saints game. Many fans seem oblivious to the anthem as
they wander towards their seats, or walk about looking for bathrooms and
concession stands. Tailgaters, almost
without exception, carry on with their cooking and drinking as the music drifts
outside the stadium gates. No time or interest in pausing for the anthem.
Actually, there is a federal act that requires allegiance to
the American Flag. In United States
Code, Title 4, Chapter 1, the law states that non military persons “should face
the flag and stand at attention with their right hand over the heart, or if
applicable, remove their headdress with the right hand and holding to the left
shoulder, hand being over the heart.”
I’m sure to the ACLU, lawsuits will come raining down if
such a law were enforced. I oppose
players taking a knee, but those that do are at least staying quite and focusing
on the anthem. Not like many fans that seem to be oblivious to a two-minute
pause in honor of those who defend the freedoms that allows these same fans to attend
a sporting event. As Jack Nicholson said
in A Few Good Men: “ We use words like
honor, code, loyalty. We use these words as the backbone of a life spent
defending something. You use them as a punchline.”
Sure,
there are many problems involving fairness throughout our nation. I have written a book about discrimination in
the federal judicial system called Justice
Denied. But there are times when our
country should speak as one voice, and that time to me is during the playing of
our national anthem.
The
American Flag is rarely flown anymore, outside of public buildings and some car
dealerships. When I grew up, many homes throughout our neighborhood proudly
hung the Flag. I still fly the nation’s flag in front of both my house and my
office, 365 days a year.
But that’s just me. I guess, to many of us old guys, patriotism
is something that too many Americans acknowledge in passing. Take for granted. No big deal.
Now let’s get on with the game.
Peace
and Justice
Jim
Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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