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This is a question Protest!

Sit-ins. Walk-outs. Smashing up the headquarters of a major political party. Chaining yourself to the railings outside your local sweet shop because they changed Marathons to Snickers. How have you stuck it to The Man?

(, Thu 11 Nov 2010, 12:24)
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Hundreds ride with 13 year old boy who was told he couldnt ride to school showing his countries flag!
Yes its America, but this is definately sticking it to the man and a damn good protest. School officials had told a 13 year old that he wasnt to cycle to school with an american flag decorating his bike. Apparantly it may offend people! Kicked up a bit of a fuss, and before they knew it, hundreds of riders turned up equipped with flags and rode to school with him.

Video here:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=6U2hB-Pz4zs&feature=share

School superintendant appologised and promised that something like that would never happen again:)
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 10:16, 9 replies)
In the Land of the free
People get upset by that sort of thing.

Not the most sensible course of action for a school offical to take.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 10:34, closed)
Whereas in this country
people don't get upset except in the imaginations of the hacks at the Daily Mail/Express.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 11:49, closed)
Unfortunately
The knuckle draggers tend to believe the bullshit the Mail/Express print unless the truth is punched into them, it's not all in the hack's imaginations.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 18:23, closed)
I get more upset by bad spelling
Miggyman has made me cry.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 15:53, closed)
Meh
Americans always get upset about the flag, but it's not the same thing as defending freedom of speech.

Would hundreds have turned up to ride with him if he'd gone to school flying the Iranian flag? How about the rainbow flag?
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 11:04, closed)
I would be baffled by Americans' love of their flag (and the US generally)
were it not so fucking sinister.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 13:14, closed)
I suppose in a country
Which in effect is 50 completely different countries all stuck together, populated by immigrants (for the most part) from all over the world, they hold dear the only thing that they truly have in common, as a collective form of national identity.

(Goddamn!)
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 17:10, closed)
hmmm....
there are several other multicultural countries in the world, that don't seem to be so... jingoistic. The merkins are a puzzling breed. That level of patriotic fervour is usually seen only in much smaller countries who need something to be proud about. It's like merka has a small cock or something.
(, Wed 17 Nov 2010, 15:17, closed)
Not just the flag,..
When I was a wee nipper I was forced to endure three years at the hands of the American "education" system, before my parents saw sense and beat a hasty retreat back to a civilised country.

Every morning, without fail, we had to recite both the Pledge of Allegiance and the National Anthem, like so many lobotomised sheep. Even me, despite the fact that I wasn't an American citizen. When my parents found out they went barmy and protested to the Principal (less-civilised version of a Headmaster) that this was simply not on. Faced with the ire of two parents who were In The Right, the Principal backed down on the Pledge of Allegiance. From that day forth, I stood with the rest of the class, as a mark of respect for the idiotic beliefs on display, but didn't have to robotically recite "Ipledgeallegiancetotheflagoftheunitedstatesofamericaandtotherepublicforwhichitstandsonenationundergodindivisiblewithlibertyandjusticeforthosewhocanaffordthelawyersfees".

Good grief, even thirty years later I can still remember the words. I guess brainwashing really does work.
(, Tue 16 Nov 2010, 18:13, closed)

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