Los Angeles Times

Trump’s latest plan to divide us is a loser — banning flag burning

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @AbcarianLA­T

President Trump did not offer a word of comfort for victims of police brutality, nor for those who have lost their lives in the COVID-19 pandemic, during his rally in Tulsa, Okla., last weekend.

That would have required compassion or empathy.

But rail against an imaginary issue like flag burning? Sure, why not?

It was another cheap and easy chunk of red meat tossed to the anemic crowd on Saturday night: “We ought to come up with legislatio­n that if you burn the American flag, you go to jail for one year!” he said, addressing Oklahoma’s two Republican senators, who basked in his attention.

It wasn’t the first time Trump has injected flag burning into the national political conversati­on.

In 2016, he suggested that anyone who burns an American flag should be imprisoned and lose his or her citizenshi­p. Last year, when two Republican senators introduced a constituti­onal amendment to ban flag burning, he tweeted his support: “A no brainer!”

A couple of weeks ago, in a call with governors, he brought it up again, according to the Washington Post. If states would pass a “very powerful flag burning statute” with “strong punishment,” he promised to “back you 100%” and mused that the current members of the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority “will accept that.”

There’s just one problem with Trump’s fantasy of jailing flag burners.

The Supreme Court has ruled — more than once — that flag burning is a constituti­onally protected form of speech.

“If it were up to me,” the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said in 2015, “I would put in jail every sandal-wearing, scruffybea­rded weirdo who burns the American flag. But I am not king.”

Indeed, as painful as it must have been for him not to be king, Scalia cast the deciding vote in the landmark 1989 5-4 ruling that declared that flag burning is protected under the 1st Amendment.

Even as ardent a conservati­ve as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has said he supports the rights of flag burners: “No act of speech,” he wrote in 2006, “is so obnoxious that it merits tampering with our First Amendment…. Surely we are strong enough to withstand a few degenerate attention-seekers.”

As angry as this country makes me at times, I would never burn an American flag. That form of protest is not my style.

But if I happened to find myself alone with a box of matches and a Confederat­e flag?

It’s quite possible my inner arsonist would burst into view.

::

Flag burning is one of those culture war issues that raises its ugly head every few years.

Back in 1968, Congress passed the Federal Flag Desecratio­n Law after Vietnam War protesters destroyed American flags. Eventually, 48 states also banned flag desecratio­n.

The Supreme Court began to challenge those laws in 1974, when it ruled that a University of Washington student named Harold Spence did not violate the law by hanging an American flag from his dorm window upside down with peace symbols taped to it. Spence hung the flag to protest the killing, in 1970, of four Kent State University antiwar protesters by Ohio National Guardsmen.

By 1989, the court had rendered invalid all state and federal laws aimed at protecting the flag from protesters.

The landmark case, Texas vs. Johnson, arose from an incident that occurred in Dallas at the 1984 Republican National Convention.

Gregory Lee “Joey” Johnson, a member of the Revolution­ary Communist Party, poured kerosene on a flag that someone had ripped from a flagpole and burned it. Johnson was protesting U.S. backing of wars against leftist government­s in Central America and also the invasion of Grenada, a tiny Caribbean island where 2,000 U.S. troops were sent in 1983, in what many believed was an effort to divert attention from the bombing deaths of at least 240 troops and personnel at a Marine barracks in Lebanon.

As the flag burned, protesters chanted, “America, the red, white and blue, we spit on you.”

No one was injured, Justice William J. Brennan Jr. later wrote in his majority opinion, “though several witnesses testified that they had been seriously offended.”

Johnson was accused of “desecratio­n of a venerated object,” convicted and sentenced to one year in jail and fined $2,000.

After the Supreme Court overturned his conviction, Congress passed the Flag Protection Act, which, again, was ruled unconstitu­tional by the court.

Not one to relinquish his constituti­onal rights, Johnson was arrested in 2016, outside the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, where he burned a flag in protest “because,” he said, “America was never great.” A judge dismissed his case, and he later won a $225,000 settlement from the city.

Johnson was arrested again last year in front of the White House, during Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, for burning a flag to protest what he called Trump’s “fascist agenda.”

At what point, I have to wonder, will folks opposed to flag burning grasp the fact that the flag represents the very freedom that allows protesters to burn it? No one has ever died for the flag; they have died defending the liberty it represents.

As much as I support Joey Johnson’s right to burn the flag, I have to admit I was touched when I read what happened to the ashes of the flag he torched.

According to Brennan, a witness collected the flag’s remains in 1984, took them home and buried them in his backyard. It was, you see, just as much his right to lay the flag to rest as it was Johnson’s to burn it in the first place.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? A PROTESTER burns the American f lag during a 2014 rally against police violence in Los Angeles. President Trump is calling for laws that would make f lag burning illegal, something the Supreme Court has consistent­ly ruled is unconstitu­tional.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times A PROTESTER burns the American f lag during a 2014 rally against police violence in Los Angeles. President Trump is calling for laws that would make f lag burning illegal, something the Supreme Court has consistent­ly ruled is unconstitu­tional.
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