Title: GoFundMe Raises $100K to Throw a RAGER For Frat Bros That Saved American Flag From Lib Terrorists 🇺🇸 Source:
Benny Johnson URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgS8P0GP9xk Published:May 1, 2024 Author:Benny Johnson Post Date:2024-05-01 21:41:10 by Esso Keywords:None Views:219 Comments:8
Poster Comment:
The U.S. National Flag Code, created in 1923, has many guidelines for displaying the American flag. Here are some of them:
Don't fly the flag upside down unless it's an emergency Don't let the flag touch the ground Don't carry the flag flat Don't use the flag as clothing, bedding, or drapery Don't use the flag for advertising Don't display the flag outdoors during bad weather Use clean, damage-free flags Always allow the flag to fall free [Raise briskly, lower slowly] Don't draw on, or otherwise mark the flag Don't place anything on the flag, including letters, insignia, or designs of any kind
The flag should also be flown at half-staff on the following days:
May 15th -- Peace Officers Memorial Day Last Monday in May -- Memorial Day (half-staff until noon only, then raise to the top of the staff) July 27th -- Korean War Veterans Armistice Day September 11th -- Patriot Day December 7th -- Pearl Harbor Day
When facing [Raising, smartly] flags, the United States flag should be flown first, followed by the state flag, city/county/locality flag, POW/MIA flag, U.S. Army flag, U.S. Marine Corps flag, U.S. Navy flag, and U.S. Air Force flag. [Slowly, with dignity, in reverse order]
Illumination Guidelines Per Federal Flag Code, Section 2, paragraph (a), it is the universal custom to display the flag only from sunrise to sunset on buildings and on stationary flagstaffs in the open. However, when a patriotic effect is desired, the flag may be displayed twenty-four hours a day if properly illuminated during the hours of darkness.