The Palm Beach Post

Take a knee. Take a seat. Take a stand. Take a chill pill.

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“Wouldn’t you love to see one of these NFL owners,” President Donald J. Trump thundered during a campaign rally last month, “when somebody disrespect­s our flag, to say, ‘Get that son of a bitch off the field right now, out. He’s fired. He’s fired!’”

Many seem to agree that profession­al football games are no place for political statements. Well, at least they agree now. I don’t recall a peep from them for nearly a decade of the U.S. government shelling out millions of dollars to turn National Football League games into combinatio­n political statements and military recruitmen­t rallies.

Meanwhile, the Houston Chronicle reports, a Texas high school student has been expelled for sitting through morning prayers to the god called government, also known as “the Pledge of Allegiance.” C’mon, people — relax!

Is it truly important that someone you don’t know didn’t assume your preferred bodily posture while a song you like was played?

Is it the end of the world that a high school student doesn’t practice the same (secular) religion as you?

I was brought up to respect the flag. The U.S. Marine Corps reinforced that tendency. A 48-star flag adorned my grandfathe­r’s casket (he served in the Navy in World War II). A 50-star flag just may cover mine one of these days. My personal politics notwithsta­nding, I’m a little bit attached to its symbolism.

But at the end of the day, the flag is a piece of cloth that some people don’t attach positive, let alone reverent, feelings to. The cry that people “died for it” is, frankly, disrespect­ful to those people and whatever their real reasons were for taking up arms beneath it.

The national anthem is a song that glorifies the killing of rebellious slaves, some of whose descendant­s are likely among those criticized for failing to stand while it’s played (ask the grandchild of an Auschwitz survivor to stand for the Deutschlan­dlied and see how he or she responds).

If it bothers you to the point of distractio­n that some people are, by your lights, insufficie­ntly respectful of the Stars and Stripes, your priorities are way out of whack. And if the flag does indeed stand for freedom, you’re part of the problem, not part of the solution.

THOMAS L. KNAPP, GAINESVILL­E Eds: Knapp is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertaria­n Advocacy Journalism.

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