joaquim61:

saltrat88:

julietteandthejet:

anvilhead1962:

arizonagunguy:

seeyotos:

thedogtagchronicles:

thedogtagchronicles:

Take your pick. When someone posts a wrong flag I tell them to unfuck their flag and attach one of these to show how it should look. Feel free to grab one when you make a correction.

It amuses me that people are still reblogging this years later. Good to know some people care about flag code.

God bless this post.

Thank god for this.

Good stuff!!! It should be taught in the schools along with a lot of other things that used to be common knowledge.

This SHOULD be taught in elementary schools but we have too many “safe space” babies who cry at simply honoring it with the pledge

Good post!

Nice refresher!!!!

On Evil and Stupidity in America

Before his death, Charles Manson ranked in as the most evil man in the US. But now that title has gone to, probably, Tim Lambesis (or the as yet unnamed political pedos). Most stupid would probably go to a number of people in Hollywood, whether it be joss whedon, Rian Johnson, or one of the interchangable “funny” news show host NPCs such as Stewart/Colbert/Kimmel/Fallon/whoever they are (Trevor Noah is a low information foreigner and doesn’t quite count toward American stupidity).

For women, Hillary Clinton still sits as the most evil woman in the US. Then it’s Casey Anthony, RBG, lena dunham, any one of those wolf-crying feminists who falsely accuse men of sexual assault (Kathleen Kennedy and Courtney Love are pretty high on the list, but more sinister names must come before them), etc. For stupidity, look no further than Dianne Feinstein, Shelia Jackson Lee, Alexandria ocacio-cortez, Nancy pelosi, the majority of Hollywood (especially those “laugh at my dumb, stolen jokes or you’re sexist” female comedians). Idk if Sarkeesian has moved to Canada, but she’d definitely rank on the stupid category.

Now some demand that religious people should prove the existence of God. Yet all of us – whatever religious, secular, moral, political or social beliefs we may hold – have to come to terms with the epistemic tragedy of humanity: we can only prove shallow truths, and that the greater beliefs that give meaning, value and purpose to our lives lie beyond proof, so that we all live by faith, even if some people try hard to avoid using that word on the basis of the flawed assumption that faith is peculiar to religion, and is always ‘blind.’

Alister McGrath, here (via shatterrealm)