So while we were in Florida, we went into one of the many art galleries.
And on the wall was this painting of the Israeli Flag with the Star of David and inside was a beautiful red heart.
Out of curiosity, I inquired how much this was and the lady says, "Oh, that is $55,000!"
While we were impressed with the painting of the Israeli flag and what it represents as one of America's greatest allies and friends, we must've looked really puzzled at the price, because the lady goes, "Well, of course it's worth it! It's by Peter Max, the most famous artist in the world."
My wife and I nodded and left the store, and immediately were asking each other why every gallery says with a straight face that the artist that they represent is the "most famous in the world."
Anyway, at the same time this was going on we were following in the news about the controversy with people burning the American flag and the question of whether this is just an expression of free speech or something more that should be prohibited as disrespectful and unpatriotic or even traitorous to the country.
In that respect, the flag that represents our values, beliefs, and patriotism is valuable beyond pure artistic sense or money, it is who we are and what we love. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Showing posts with label Flag Burning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flag Burning. Show all posts
December 1, 2016
Love The Flags
Labels:
Ally,
America,
Art,
Beautiful,
Beliefs,
Constitution,
Flag,
Flag Burning,
Freedom of Speech,
Friend,
Heart,
Israel,
Love,
Patriotism,
Protests,
Proud,
Respect,
Star of David,
Values
November 10, 2016
After The Election Hypocrisy
So after the election yesterday, once the results were in, the after shocks were apparent in downtown, Washington DC and across the nation.
- There were quiet spaces set up for people to "console" themselves and each other.
- There were signs like this to change the rules and the system, and abolish the electoral college.
- There were more nasty grams between family, friends, colleagues, and strangers on Facebook and Twitter.
- There were protests and riots.
- There was American flag burning.
- There was yelling, cursing, and crying.
Of course, I understand that the election was an upset to half the population (actually, maybe over half of the popular vote).
And I certainly agree with people who are against bigotry and racism--these are things that should ALWAYS be condemned in no uncertain terms!
However, while trying to take the moral high ground, there is plenty of bigotry and hate to go around--such as branding other people as racists (even if they are not so), calling tens of millions of people "deplorables," and stating that they are unequivocally "unredeemable."
Similarly, while attacking one candidate for his sexual banter and (possibly) conduct, the husband of the other candidate was himself impeached from the presidency for his infidelities.
And no matter how big a feminist our beliefs, rather than falsely blaming an unjust "glass ceiling," in her concession speech yesterday, the candidate should have done a mea culpa and acknowledged perhaps a very understandable "corruption ceiling" that put the brakes on her own trust, likability and electability.
Reminiscent to condemning the violence at the Trump rallies, the hypocrisy of it all, was when it become known that the operatives of the DCN themselves, in Project Veritas, were the ones actually sparking and doing the violence.
Further, one candidate was ruthlessly denigrated for even suggesting that there was election fraud going on, even while indeed town hall questions were being passed from the media by the DNC's own chairperson to the other candidate and the prior chairperson was fired from the DNC's actions in their rigging the primary against Bernie Sanders who would have had a decent chance at actually winning "the whole enchilada."
But what happened to everyone committing to accepting the results of a free and fair election in a democracy--is that only if YOUR candidate wins?
Whether it's with hate, name-calling, violence, and sore losing...maybe there is a lot of bad behavior along with "calling the tea kettle black" going on.
While we call for the "orderly transitions" of power in Egypt, for Britain with Brexit, and elsewhere in the world, perhaps our leaders should hold ourselves to similar standards of conduct here.
It's time to STOP the HATE, BIGOTRY, AND VIOLENCE on all sides, and come together to do something positive for this country.
The national security and welfare of the country is at stake, but even more so, the soul of it is still mired in corruption and lies of a very ugly election. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
- There were quiet spaces set up for people to "console" themselves and each other.
- There were signs like this to change the rules and the system, and abolish the electoral college.
- There were more nasty grams between family, friends, colleagues, and strangers on Facebook and Twitter.
- There were protests and riots.
- There was American flag burning.
- There was yelling, cursing, and crying.
Of course, I understand that the election was an upset to half the population (actually, maybe over half of the popular vote).
And I certainly agree with people who are against bigotry and racism--these are things that should ALWAYS be condemned in no uncertain terms!
However, while trying to take the moral high ground, there is plenty of bigotry and hate to go around--such as branding other people as racists (even if they are not so), calling tens of millions of people "deplorables," and stating that they are unequivocally "unredeemable."
Similarly, while attacking one candidate for his sexual banter and (possibly) conduct, the husband of the other candidate was himself impeached from the presidency for his infidelities.
And no matter how big a feminist our beliefs, rather than falsely blaming an unjust "glass ceiling," in her concession speech yesterday, the candidate should have done a mea culpa and acknowledged perhaps a very understandable "corruption ceiling" that put the brakes on her own trust, likability and electability.
Reminiscent to condemning the violence at the Trump rallies, the hypocrisy of it all, was when it become known that the operatives of the DCN themselves, in Project Veritas, were the ones actually sparking and doing the violence.
Further, one candidate was ruthlessly denigrated for even suggesting that there was election fraud going on, even while indeed town hall questions were being passed from the media by the DNC's own chairperson to the other candidate and the prior chairperson was fired from the DNC's actions in their rigging the primary against Bernie Sanders who would have had a decent chance at actually winning "the whole enchilada."
But what happened to everyone committing to accepting the results of a free and fair election in a democracy--is that only if YOUR candidate wins?
Whether it's with hate, name-calling, violence, and sore losing...maybe there is a lot of bad behavior along with "calling the tea kettle black" going on.
While we call for the "orderly transitions" of power in Egypt, for Britain with Brexit, and elsewhere in the world, perhaps our leaders should hold ourselves to similar standards of conduct here.
It's time to STOP the HATE, BIGOTRY, AND VIOLENCE on all sides, and come together to do something positive for this country.
The national security and welfare of the country is at stake, but even more so, the soul of it is still mired in corruption and lies of a very ugly election. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
After The Election Hypocrisy
Labels:
Bigotry,
Brainwashing,
Collusion,
Corruption,
Democracy,
Divisiveness,
Election,
Flag Burning,
Glass Ceiling,
Hate,
Hypocrisy,
Impeached,
Lies,
National Security,
Photo,
Politics,
Racism,
Violence,
Vote Rigging
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