Jennifer de Poyen was born in Canada but she is also American because of her father, so de Poyen is consider a binational citizen. de Poyen is an artist and scriptwriter. She works for the San Diego Union-Tribune as a dance and theater critic, and she is also a columnist. In the article "Seeing Stars and Stripes," she writes about people's response to the American flag before and after 9/11. To some Americans, the American flag represented possibility, freedom, and liberty, but to others it represented pain, alienation, and an object of advertisement to begin a true American.
de Poyen as well as many Americans regarded the flag differently before 9/11. de Poyen saw the flag as an object that "had been the property of right-wing so-called 'patriots,' who had appropriated it to promote certain ideas of what it means to be American."(116). She saw it more like something the government would use to promote how a true American should be. Some Americans saw "the flag for what it is meant to represent: freedom, liberty, and possibility"(116). It brought hope for them and they felt protected by it. de Poyen says in the article that Paul Taylor stated,"'When you used to see a flag on a car, it usually meant a redneck"', for others it was just the American flag that were all supposed to cherish(117). After 9/11 some Americans began to change the way they viewed the American flag.
After 9/11 the way people treated and responded to the flag changed in terms of new respect for the flag. de Poyen expressed that, "After the devastation of sept. 11, there was renewed interest [.], presumably for the same reason that there was renewed interest in the flag itself: as a locus for grief about the missing, the dead and the devastated; [.] as an expression of defiance in the face of fear and loathing for those who had attacked us, and would attack again", many Americans began to care more about the flag because it was a sign of solidarity they felt that they were supporting the family of those who died(117).
Andrew was martyred by being crucified on an X-shaped cross) and was next to impossible to confuse with the Stars and Stripes in battle. ... The stars represented the eleven states actually in the Confederacy, plus Kentucky and Missouri. ... The bill would create the state's third flag in two years, this one with a state seal and three red-and-white stripes. ... It is the flag that older Blacks remember seeing when Klansmen marched through their neighborhoods during voter registration drives or other events the KKK opposed. ... To combat the issue, South Carolina lifted the flag over t...
"War is always a betrayal: of the young by the old, of soldiers by politicians, of idealists by cynics." ~ Chris Hedges (The Oregonian) Our nation has been fighting a battle of power. Power to have control over a cause that has not been fully explained. This cause is tearing nations apart ...
With Worley's "Have You Forgotten" and Tippin's "Where the Stars and Stripes and the Eagles Fly." to add to the list. ... In the days following September 11th, a person couldn't drive down the street without seeing a car with an American Flag on it or a "United We Stand" bumper sticker displayed for everyone to see. ...
From the contrasting personalities of the fifty states to the boldly colored "stars and stripes", America screams confidence, equality, and opportunity. This, my friends, is a very tangled web of deception, seeing how America is just the opposite of what it claims to be. ...
Instead of seeing the normal news and weather forecast, I saw something that to this day puts chills down my spine. ... As I saw the stars and stripes go up over the crash site, the true meaning of "The Star Spangled Banner" finally hit home with me. As Francis Scott Key saw the stars and bars still flying over an American fort after an attack, so I saw the flag going up after a modern day assault on our land. ...
If we view Troy's life as a whole we are seeing it as tragic. ... "That's just the was it was," shrugged the Philadelphia Stars Gene Benson (16). ... After being away for seven years, Corey returns in his marine uniform, proudly wearing his corporals stripes. ...
McHenry in Baltimore, MD asked for a flag so big that "the British would have no trouble seeing it from a distance." ... They cut 15 stars that measured two feet from point to point. There were eight red and seven white stripes, each two feet wide. ...
After several long weeks of looking for a home of our own, my husband and I finally found the perfect place. It was a two-story cream- colored modular home that came with a one-acre land package. The house had three full-sized bedrooms, two full bathrooms, a living room, den, a pedestal type dini...