WHITE CROSSES, BLACK RIBBONS, AND CHALK
I was driving my daughter to school one morning, and I saw one of those roadside memorials to accident victims at a streetcorner, a cross made of two-by-fours painted white, with name and date in black, with a few faded artificial flowers. Nobody ever takes these things down. These roadside memorials have manna, messing with them would be like desecrating a grave; very bad medicine. Then I thought, "What if white crosses with the names of the soldiers killed in Iraq appeared along the roadsides all over America...? Then I started to think about what I would need to do it. Then I started to think about other things I could do, on a thin dime. Black Ribbons with the motto: WE MOURN THE DEAD/WE HONOR THEIR SERVICE/WE DO NOT SUPPORT THIS WAR/YELLOW IS NOT OUR COLOR;printed on leaflets that can slipped under the windshield wiper of an SUV; and chalk, sidewalk chalk, 2.99 a bucket. Walking with chalk in my pocket, writing the number of the dead in Iraq on walls, sidewalks, the middle of streets...stayed tuned for further developments, and keep those emails, comments, and .jpgs coming. By this time I had dropped my daughter off, and was on my way to work, tooling along the expressway brainstorming to myself. In Tulsa, the verge and medians of the highways are landscaped, often wide lawns of grass planted with trees. Last July I visited Arlington National Cemetery, and in my mind's eye I saw those lawns with the endless ranks of tombstones. I thought, "What if, on a morning of a chosen day, commuters were confronted by a row of white crosses, each with the name of a dead soldier on it?"
Last updated:
5/2/2007; 9:49:58 PM


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Wednesday, July 19, 2006

MADE IN AMERICA?

(6)

This is a case for the flag from a soldier's coffin, a soldier who died in the service of our country, most likely in a foreign land. As you can see, pilgrims and seekers, this case is made to fit the triangle into which the white gloved honor guard folds and presents Old Glory, in solemn ritual, to a grieving widow, father, or mother. This case also has space for display of the dead soldier's decorations, and a photo of the soldier in dress uniform, as represented here by images printed on slick paper. This case is sold by Micheal's, a chain box store that sells arts and crafts supplies nationwide. Is this case for an American soldier's funeral flag made in the United States of America, or in a foreign land? Let's look at the back.

This flag case is made in China.


9:19:43 AM    comment []



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Last update: 5/2/2007; 9:49:58 PM.
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