home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 41American NotesPROTESTSMore Fuel for The Fire
-
-
- Until last month, when Congress restored its cachet by
- making it a criminal offense, flag burning had virtually gone
- out of style as a means of radical protest. Now desecrating the
- Stars and Stripes has become a bit of a fad. Last week four
- demonstrators staged a torching on the steps of the U.S.
- Capitol. Among the participants: Gregory Lee Johnson, whose
- conviction for setting fire to a flag at the 1984 Republican
- Convention led to a Supreme Court ruling upholding the
- constitutionality of the practice. Said Johnson: "We're back."
-
- The burning was designed to produce a quick challenge to
- the Flag Protection Act of 1989, passed by Congress last month
- amid an orgy of jingoistic rhetoric. If the Supreme Court
- strikes down the law on constitutional grounds, as seems likely,
- Congress might be stampeded into approving an anti-flag burning
- amendment urged by President Bush. It might be wiser to turn
- down the heat.
-
-