Posted on 02/27/2024 11:54:13 AM PST by knighthawk
It says only the US and State flags can be displayed. Thats it. Not a reading rainbow, not all lives matter, not a Gadsen, etc.
TN is following FL and TX cleaning up their state.
I went to the source article and my comment that only the US flag or Tennessee flag was incorrect, although the article said that. Later, it said, “Flags of Native American tribes, local governments’ armed forces and prisoners of war or those missing in action, other countries and their local governments, colleges or universities or flags of the schools themselves are approved.”
Nobody’s stopping you from being a fag, Flame-O.
Just keep it out of the classrooms and out of our faces.
You can fly the US flag and state flag. Nothing else.
Yep.
I fly the Pine Tree flag (see below).
It is historical and in a sane world should be allowed to be flown but unless you block all the holes the rats will sneak in.
No, there’s bad music. About the tenth time I heard some different country singer whinging about how he was drunk, his wife cheated on/him him, his dog died or fled and his truck broke down or was repossessed I just wanted to nuke the entire genre.
I have gone back to check several times since and seen no reason to change my opinion.
In the words of Private Manuel Mendoza, UNSC Marines, “Hey... if the Covenant wanna wipe out this particular part of my history, that’s fine by me.”
Millstone Report with Paul Harrell: Tennessee House BANS RAINBOW Flag In Schools, Dems TRIGGERED
Fag rag.
That’s included. Only the US and Tennessee flags can be displayed in the classrooms.
The war is won on many small battle fronts.
this is one. be encouraged and other states may follow.
OK, that’s cool. Thanks for the clarification. My bad, too.
didn’t realize native American had flags.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/flag-heraldry/National-flags
Since World War II, interest in flags has expanded beyond their creation and use. Political scientists, historians, sociologists, and others recognize them as artifacts expressive of the cultures of certain times and places. The scholarly study of the history, symbolism, etiquette, design, manufacture, and other aspects of flags is known as vexillology (from the Latin vexillum, “banner”). Such studies are fostered by many publications as well as by the International Federation of Vexillological Associations and its members.
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