9
Broadcaster Press 9
July 7, 2015 www.broadcasteronline.com
Watching As The Flag Goes By ...
Home Country
BY SLIM RANDLES
We all watched as the
flag came by. It was the
first thing in the parade, of
course. Great big one, carried
by two of the kids from the
ROTC at the high school. The
bands followed, along with
the mounted patrol, the ski
patrol in their summer-weight
jackets, the float with the
princesses on it, and the local
kids leading dogs and cats –
some rather reluctantly – on
leashes.
For some of us, the Fourth
of July parade is a chance
to see just how much the
local kids have grown over
the past year. For others, it’s
a chance to see something
that is really ours. This is our
valley. This is our town. This
is our parade. These are our
people. These are the people
who make our little valley
unique in the whole world.
This is a chance for us all to
get together and celebrate us,
you know?
But all that comes later.
What comes first on this
day above all others is the
American flag. Oh, it’s a great
big one. Where they found
this one, I don’t know, but it
takes two high school boys to
carry it. It really doesn’t matter what size it is, because
it’s what it means to us that
counts.
To Herb over there, there
are memories of his terrible
days in Korea, I’m sure, and
the wounds that sent him
home early. To Doc, maybe
it’s the way the G.I. Bill let
him go back to college and
fulfill his life’s dream of taking
care of sick people.
To Annette, over across
the street there, there is a
look in her eyes that tells us
that flag meant she could protest whatever the complaintdu-jour was during her
college days. She knows there
are few places in the world
this tolerant of unpopular
opinions.
And then there’s Dewey
down on the corner. He’s got
his hand over his heart as
the flag goes by. Maybe he’s
thinking of a country that will
allow him to start a business
with a borrowed pickup and a
shovel and supply our flower
beds with fertilizer. He sure
wasn’t able to make anything
else work for him. And today
this accident-prone pal of
ours has branched out into
fishing worms and compost.
But these are just speculations, because what the
flag means to each of us is
personal. We don’t have to
tell anyone. We never have
Hartington Tree LLC
to explain. We even have the
freedom not to be here looking as the flag goes by.
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It’s an American thing.
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