this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2024
98 points (90.8% liked)
Antifascism
359 readers
1 users here now
A community to post acts of antifascism and other left-wing activism. Please message a mod if you would like something posted and we can tag you in the post as well.
founded 8 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
He's a tow truck driver from the thin yellow line Chevy logo.
I think the pale yellow might be dispatchers?
Its all so stupid.
There is one flag. Everything else is a disrespectful bastardization.
And the only reason to wear a black and white version is night time infrared identification in the military.
Similarly, seeing the "charging" flag on some police uniforms has been uhhh... interesting. That flag was for troops in combat. Because there's a military tradition of moving the flag forward in battle. If the police are in battle then we've already lost.
The united states exists only to serve my specific interests.
I thought yellow was first responders like EMTs
I think that's orange?
Again, its all pretty stupid imo. EMTs, FFs, police, whatever, already have iconography.
The "thin" whatever flags are all bullshit. It all comes back to an 80s documentary about a cop being killed, I think it was Dallas in the 70s. The flag crap all stems from that, which btw found evidence the person convicted of the murder to be innocent (his conviction was overturned after the movie was released). The name was a bit of irony about how cops perceive themselves, and how its different from reality.
Not that you'll find anyone with one of those flags who has any idea what the origins are of course.
Edit: This is the man who was convicted
This is the movie
I thought they all really started popping up as a counter movement against the BLM signs. At least, that seems to be the implication around here.
They did, but that's not where the reference comes from. It actually goes back WAY further to the 1800s, but that's not super relevant (Scots in the Crimean War). The blue line has been referenced in the US for about a hundred years iirc, and had been a reference throughout PDs for themselves since around the 50s.
The movie I mentioned popularized the term outside of the PD, and the thin blue line flags started popping up as part of Blue Lives Matter in response to Black Lives Matter. Which is particularly gross to me, because it comes across as the police being in conflict with people of color, which just kind of proves the point of Black Lives Matter to me.
It took very little time for it to be a white nationalist symbol as well, in no small part due to many police also being members of the white nationalist movements out there...
So the flag is a response to Black Lives Matter, but the "thin blue line" has a much longer history that the flag is a reference to.