Back in the deep-dark bowels of history, in the 1960s, it
was quite customary for householders to fly US flags on some holidays. My
parents put out a pair on either side of the front porch on Memorial Day,
Independence Day and Veterans Day. (For some reason Flag Day didn’t make the
lineup.)
I used to love taking the two flags out of the coat
closet, where they lived, unfurl them and slide the staffs into the holders
affixed to the wooden pillars that flanked the front steps. They hung at a
slight angle, so that you could see the beautiful, clear colors even if there
was no wind.
We never hung them out in the rain, and we were careful
to take them down, furl them tightly against the staffs and return them to the
coat closet at dusk. Those were the rules.
It occurs to me that I hardly ever see flags flown in
residential areas. I almost don’t expect it here in the Valley They Call
Silicon, where people have their heads down disrupting technologies, shifting
paradigms and being thought leaders, much too busy to consider acts of
sacrifice by the men and women who go in harm’s way without thought of The Next
Big Thing. Except as consumers of their killer apps.
They spend big bucks on Christmas
light displays and Halloween
extravaganzas, but hanging Old Glory is just too much of an effort. Plus—un-hip,
you know.
(Also—more than 35% of the population around here is foreign
born (a good portion of them on H1B visas), and therefore perhaps not
particularly inclined to engage in displays of flag wavery.)
So I was rather heartened, on my walk around Mountain
View, on Saturday to see this amid the carefully-groomed landscaping:
Respect.
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