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Flag Code, Etiquette and Laws


THE FLAG OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA



The Flag Code

With Liberty and justice for All

Pledge to the Flag

Our National Anthem

Displaying the Flag
When displaying the flag, it is important to remember certain guidelines of proper flag etiquette. They are:
When on display or carried in a procession with other flags, the flag should be positioned to its own RIGHT. Also, it should be placed to the RIGHT of a speaker or staging area, while other flags are placed to the left.flag with others
When the flag is displayed from a staff projecting horizontally from a window sill, balcony, or building, the stars of the flag should be placed at the peak of the staff unless the flag is at half staff.
The flag should be at the center and at the highest point of the group when a number of flags of states, localities, or societies are grouped for display.
flag over casketWhen the flag is used to cover a casket, it should be placed with the stars at the head and over the left shoulder. The flag should not be lowered into the grave or be allowed to touch the ground.


Respect for the Flag

The Flag Code, a national guideline on ways in which the flag is to be respected, states that no disrespect should be shown to the flag of the United States of America. Specific ways, in which the flag should not be used, according to the code, are:
FLYING OUR FLAG
It is proper to display the flag from sunrise to sunset on all days the weather permits. The flag may also be displayed at night if illuminated by a light. But it is even more important to display the flag on national holidays and days of importance, including:

THE FLAG IS PRECISELY DEFINED BY LAW

DISPLAY OF MILITARY FLAG

THE LAW OF THE FLAG

When ALL the official American flags are gone, our Country is gone.

Here are the correct answers to all these questions:

IT  "IS"  TREASON
flag over street
 In early 1942, in the Philippines, a young officer named Lt. Ramsey, under the command of Gen. Wainwright, led the last mounted cavalry charge in the history of the U.S. Army.  Lt. Ramsey and his men fought so viciously and with such determination that, against overwhelming odds, the Japanese were routed, buying precious time to enable the American forces to retreat to the peninsula of Bataan.  When the American forces were finally forced by starvation to surrender to the Japanese, Lt. Ramsey refused to surrender and slipped through the Japanese lines with a handful of his men and continued to make war against the Japanese.  By hiding in the mountains and jungle, Lt. Ramsey, though poorly equipped, was able to train a guerrilla army and wreak havoc on the Japanese until Gen. McArthur returned.

 

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