Tony Dodero -- From the Newsroom
- Share via
I remember the phone call I got about a year ago.
It was from a local World War II veteran who was shocked to open up
his copy of the Daily Pilot and see a full-page ad with the words “Long
May it Wave” and a picture of a man sitting next to what looked to him
like the Japanese rising sun battle flag.
He had a hard time believing his local paper would do such a thing,
and so did I. So I opened up the paper and looked at the offending ad. To
my great relief, the ad did not feature a Japanese flag but a lifeguard
blackball flag, which in black and white looked nearly the same as the
one that taunted World War II soldiers some 60 years ago.
After I cleared up the matter, it dawned on me what a powerful and
searing image something like a flag can conjure up.
Fast forward to today. I can’t remember a time when the image of the
American flag meant so much to me and those around me.
Seeing the stars and stripes flying so proudly on street corners and
on cars after the shocking terror of Sept. 11 has been both a comforting
and emotional sight for many of us.
I remember a week and a half after the attacks, I was driving down the
road listening to the kickoff of a college football game and the singing
of the “Star Spangled Banner.”
And when the song hit the words, “the bombs bursting in air, gave
proof through the night that our flag was still there,” the crowd on the
radio burst into applause and howls.
I burst into tears.
The visual image of our flag flying strong after the horrible image of
the World Trade Center disaster was more than I could take.
Which brings me to my point.
I have a hard time understanding the arguments now of people who
wonder aloud why some are offended by the Confederate flag that was used
as a prop by the Newport Harbor High School band at football games this
year.
It’s a just a flag, they argue, a piece of history. What’s the big
deal?
Well, it is a big deal.
Just as the American flag is not just a flag or just a piece of
history, neither is the Confederate flag.
The flag, to many, represents a symbol of hatred. A symbol of a
division.
It is the remnants of a time when a whole segment of our country would
rather secede from the union, go to battle and fight brother against
brother until the death, than end the evil and torturous practice of
slavery.
That’s a powerful message and the Confederate flag is a reminder of
that.
But the Japanese rising sun and the Confederate flag aren’t the only
flags that offer painful reminders to us of painful times.
In early 1999, many may remember the protests that raged in
Westminster when a video store owner decided to hang in his shop a
Vietnamese flag and a picture of Ho Chi Minh, the leader of the
Vietnamese Communists.
The anger swelled for days and many took issue with the symbol of the
Vietnamese flag, which they said represented the oppression of the regime
that now controls their homeland.
In fact, the protesters were joined by such notables as Dist. Atty.
Tony Rauckaukas, GOP county party Chairman Tom Fuentes and soon-to-be
Costa Mesa Assemblyman Ken Maddox, who said:
“While the 1st Amendment may defend this man’s right to display these
hateful symbols of tyranny, it does not change the fact that it is
wrong.”
I hope Maddox and the others feel the same about the tyranny that the
Confederate flag represents.
To be sure, there is no comparison with the actions of that video
store owner and that of the Newport Harbor band.
The band’s intention was to supply a history lesson and they used the
stars and bars for effect, not a political message.
Maybe in an inadvertent way, they provided more powerful discussion
and debate than they ever intended. For that, we may even owe them
thanks.
Still, instead of arguing that point, many have defended the very use
of the flag itself. One letter writer even noted that the “Yankee flag,”
as she put it, was just as offensive to those in the South as the
Confederate flag is to those in the North.
But if Sept. 11 taught us anything, it is that our flag represents so
much more than just our country. It represents freedom, civility, liberty
and a land where many have united as one.
It should be more clear to us than ever that putting the Confederate
flag and all it symbolizes, or any other flag of tyranny and injustice,
on the same pedestal as the American flag is a disservice to all Old
Glory represents.
If believing that is political correctness at its worst, I guess I’m
guilty as charged.
***
Oh those sneaky Greenlight folks.
As many of you know, the Daily Pilot editorialized in favor of Measure
G, the ballot box initiative that would have given the OK to the
expansion of the Koll Center on the corner of Jamboree Road and MacArthur
Boulevard.
Our stance was a rather unpopular one with those who backed
Greenlight, the slow-growth measure passed a year ago this month.
Still, however unpopular it was, we stood for what we thought was
right.
Those backing the Koll expansion capitalized on our position and power
over the citizenry (yeah right) and plastered the town with bold campaign
signs heralding our support for Measure G.
So imagine our glee Wednesday morning, the day after Measure G took a
solid trouncing in the polls, to find someone had stuck one of those very
signs on the Daily Pilot’s front lawn.
Talk about rubbing it in our face.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. His column appears on Mondays. If you
have story ideas or concerns about news coverage, please send messages
either via e-mail to [email protected] or by phone at 949-574-4258.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.