Posted on 01/09/2009 7:58:07 PM PST by CedarDave
This is Peter Lynch, his e-mail begins. The guy who tore down the Mexican flag.
That is his identity now, still, more than a year since he tore down and tearing up both the fabric of another country and the fabric of his life.
It is not the identity he wanted. He never imagined himself the poster boy of both patriotic zeal and xenophobic bile, never imagined his single act would crystallize in him both what he loves about his country and what he hates.
You remember this guy. On Sept. 17, 2007, Lynch was fresh from eight years of military service and a student at the University of New Mexico when he took matters and the Mexican flag into his own hands after seeing it flying on campus unaccompanied by the U.S. flag a clear violation of flag protocol and an especially egregious affront on Constitution Day, an obscure holiday but one on which flying the flag is most obligatory.
Lynch says he made efforts to peaceably rectify the matter, contacting the Army ROTC, the Dean of Students Office and the Veterans Office.
The flag came down four hours later, but in shreds.
Lynch was eventually charged with misdemeanor criminal damage to property, but even before then he was cast across the talk show airwaves and national news as both patriot and bigot, his act a hate crime or a heroic deed.
(Excerpt) Read more at abqjournal.com ...
You can read the entire article for free at the link without subscribing or registering. Scroll down the page, watch the short video commercial and then enter the Journal to read this and other stories.
NM list PING!
(FReepmail greyfoxx39 to be added or removed from the list)
At first he did the right thing: he notified the people involved of the breach in etiquette. When they didn't respond fast enough, he should have taken photographs, notified the press, written a letter to the editor, etc. I could even understand taking down the flag, respectfully folding it, and giving it to the campus police or the ROTC. But to tear the flag to shreds was not necessary. I think the court was right to order anger management counseling.
I feel sorry for Lynch, too, for the media coverage and the harrassment that followed.
Here's the quote from a previous story:
The flag, which had been put up for Mexican Independence Day, was never supposed to have been flying by itself, but when the Army ROTC on campus went to retire the U.S. and state flags on the evening of Sept. 14, 2007, they left the Mexican flag flying, thinking its owners would take it down, the Journal has reported. Then, the Army ROTC students, who were supposed to raise the U.S. and New Mexico flags on the following day forgot to do so, the Journal said.
Mr Lynch was on FR for a while in the midst of this controversy now he says he voted for Obama
Somewhere in the middle of this story there must be a lesson
Anything you would like to ad to this article?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.