bruto
Penultimate Amazing
I'm really not confusing the two here...really. I know that it's stealing, but the civil rights movement began when people stopped following the rules, and committed crimes in order to build awareness freely accepting the consequences of their action to do so. I know that there's an impossibly wide scope between refusing to sit at the back of the bus and knocking off a Brinks truck, but why is this act so darned despicable, while Monks hurling molotov cocktails in Myanmar is acceptable?
Well, if you really can't tell the difference or realize that it is a substantive one in addition to a matter of degree, I'm not sure anything I say can change that, but to begin with, it's not just a matter of "following the rules." The civil rights demonstrators and the Myanmar monks were both opposing government policies that deprived people of rights they considered fundamental. Not that I'm all that much in favor of monks or anyone else flinging molotov cocktails, either. I don't know why that comes into the argument at all. The civil rights activists accepted arrest, acknowledging that they were purposely breaking laws that were unjust, and challenging the laws themselves, on the ground not only that the laws themselves were unjust but that to abide by them was inherently unjust, and that conscience required them to reject complicity with them. The guy who tore down the flag was protesting just what, and against whom? He committed an offense against an individual, not a government, in response to a perceived offense to his own patriotic sensibilities: a breach of etiquette. That really is all. He certainly cannot have been contending that laws protecting private property are themselves are criminal. I do not believe that any reasonable person could stretch the idea of civil disobedience to cover that.
Aside from all that, in the original post of yours to which I replied, you brought up the issue of "equal rights to protest," with the example of burning a flag in violation of fire ordinances being seen as protected free speech. I have no idea whether that has or has not occurred. I would assume, though, that the burning of a flag or anything else in violation of fire ordinances would be a violation of the fire ordinances. Of course, if these ordinances are specific to flags, or enforced only with regard to flags, then they are not fire ordinances, they're flag ordinances, something different. The question of free speech has always, as far as I know, been a matter of whether the flag itself is in some way sacred and whether that cachet makes otherwise lawful actions unlawful, so I'd concur that invoking the flag to justify other crimes is wrong, whether it be to burn it or to rescue it.
Anyway, I go along with old Norman Thomas (I think he was the one who said it, anyway....): If you want a really meaningful gesture, don't burn the flag; wash it.
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