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Would you fly a flag for your country?

(823 Posts)
Sago Sun 24-Aug-25 19:27:43

I was born in England but am of Irish heritage, I am proud of both England and Ireland.

My daughter lives on the outskirts of a village that has scores of union flags flying, it lifts my spirits as we drive in.

On a recent trip to Norway I loved seeing all the homes flying their flag and wondered why we don’t have same sense of patriotism.

I will fly a flag, I’m going to order a pole and we will fly the flag my husbands grandparents flew on their flagpole on VE Day.

I am not a racist, our grandchildren are mixed race, we have friends who are Congolese, Sri Lankan, Egyptian etc.

I am however British and very proud, we need to reclaim our flag and our pride.

Anniebach Sun 24-Aug-25 21:30:50

I love my Welsh flag and this is not suddenly. Certainly flew it
when Charles was invested Prince of Wales, always on March 1st and for the six Nations.
The Union Jack means not a jot, it represents three countries not four

vegansrock Sun 24-Aug-25 21:30:04

We’ve answered why it’s now - it’s a stirring up of prejudice masked as patriotism. Blaming immigrants for our dire performance as a country - let’s forget the economic damage of Brexit - no can’t say it’s the fault of the EU anymore which was the previous trope, now it’s the fault of the immigrants.

Jaxjacky Sun 24-Aug-25 21:23:39

We’re

Jaxjacky Sun 24-Aug-25 21:23:27

Why now, most of us have had plenty of years to fly a flag, I assume you where equally patriotic over those years too?

foxie48 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:17:02

The English Defence League is funding some of the organisations that are supplying the flags. That says it all!

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:16:51

StripeyGran

Whitewavemark2

But no one has answered the question.

Why suddenly now? And not last year or the year before etc.

Why the sudden need to fly a flag? What has changed?

It is just plain weird.

I have answered it WW. Race,colour, perceived injustice, anger.

😮 no you are so wrong.

It is all about patriotism and pride in one’s country - apparently

growstuff Sun 24-Aug-25 21:16:21

vegansrock

It’s becoming a thing now as the far right are using flag waving stirring up a social media campaign against immigration. That’s why it’s threatening to many.

It's a clever tactic, isn't it? Use a perfectly legal action as a symbol of hate-mongering, but claim it's just patriotism. The painted ones are, however, criminal damage.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:15:21

Perhaps everyone will also have the same independent thought and start wearing the Reform football shirt. It is a rather fetching turquoise with a turquoise Union Jack printed on it.

StripeyGran Sun 24-Aug-25 21:12:55

Whitewavemark2

But no one has answered the question.

Why suddenly now? And not last year or the year before etc.

Why the sudden need to fly a flag? What has changed?

It is just plain weird.

I have answered it WW. Race,colour, perceived injustice, anger.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:12:04

growstuff

Whitewavemark2

But no one has answered the question.

Why suddenly now? And not last year or the year before etc.

Why the sudden need to fly a flag? What has changed?

It is just plain weird.

It's an orchestrated campaign.

No!

I’m led to believe that everyone has suddenly all had the same independent thought😄

vegansrock Sun 24-Aug-25 21:11:58

It’s becoming a thing now as the far right are using flag waving stirring up a social media campaign against immigration. That’s why it’s threatening to many.

Casdon Sun 24-Aug-25 21:10:40

The Leader of the Gang says so Whitewavemark2.
www.facebook.com/ReformUKRibbleValley/posts/fly-the-flag-nigel-farage-says-reform-uk-will-never-shy-away-from-celebrating-ou/1172169841612581/

growstuff Sun 24-Aug-25 21:10:36

Whitewavemark2

But no one has answered the question.

Why suddenly now? And not last year or the year before etc.

Why the sudden need to fly a flag? What has changed?

It is just plain weird.

It's an orchestrated campaign.

growstuff Sun 24-Aug-25 21:10:12

What about all the flags which have appeared painted on roads and on buildings. I went for a walk this afternoon and there was one painted on a mini-roundabout in my town. There were people cleaning it off. It's criminal damage - nothing to do with patriotism.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:05:34

eazybee

Yes I would, and I do for jubilees, the Coronation, (both) and days of national celebration.
Dreadful that people feel the they need to explain how and why they are not racist.
There are several houses round here that fly flags regularly, one where the owner is a vexillophile and has a huge collection, and always happy to oblige for birthdays, weddings, funerals etc of whatever nationality.
And people are not being led by the nose; they are perfectly capable of independent thought.

Interesting phenomenon though.

They’ve all had an independent thought at the same time.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 21:03:43

But no one has answered the question.

Why suddenly now? And not last year or the year before etc.

Why the sudden need to fly a flag? What has changed?

It is just plain weird.

eddiecat78 Sun 24-Aug-25 20:57:25

Absolutely not. I have no desire to and my children and grandchildren would be disgusted if I did

keepingquiet Sun 24-Aug-25 20:55:04

A neighbour of mine flies the Jolly Roger. Another house nearby flies a variety of flags, including the Yorkshire flag and the Israeli flag. Just a little further away the rainbow flag is flown too sometimes.

People are free to fly whatever flags they like on their own property.

A funny story though- last night someone was asking where they could get a St George's flag to fly and were told without a hint of irony that Temu have very cheap ones...

vegansrock Sun 24-Aug-25 20:53:26

It’s being weaponised as a show of prejudice not pride, associated with thuggery and intended to menace. Not by folk on here but the far right campaign trying to persuade us waving a symbol is somehow patriotism - it isn’t it’s nationalistic. Don’t get gaslighted.

Casdon Sun 24-Aug-25 20:52:41

I’ve never seen England flags waved at royal events either, only the Union Jack. Normal use of national flags for each country of the UK is at sporting events, when people are supporting their home team.

eazybee Sun 24-Aug-25 20:51:31

Yes I would, and I do for jubilees, the Coronation, (both) and days of national celebration.
Dreadful that people feel the they need to explain how and why they are not racist.
There are several houses round here that fly flags regularly, one where the owner is a vexillophile and has a huge collection, and always happy to oblige for birthdays, weddings, funerals etc of whatever nationality.
And people are not being led by the nose; they are perfectly capable of independent thought.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 20:48:53

Primrose53

Think about all the English flags at royal events, at football matches and music concerts all over the country.

We stayed at a large hotel on Corfu a couple of years ago and it had flags from just about every country flying on the roof. It was good to see.

Yes but why the need to hang one from seemingly every available pole. It there royal dos or football matches that I’m not aware of?

Casdon Sun 24-Aug-25 20:48:10

It is what it Primrose53.

Primrose53 Sun 24-Aug-25 20:47:23

Casdon

Whitewavemark2

I simply don’t understand this sudden urge to hang a flag on a pole.

5 years ago or even last year I bet hardly anyone on this thread flew a flag or indeed even gave it a thought.

Are people being led by the nose - this is all very odd.

This is what it is Whitewavemark2
D'you wanna be in my gang, my gang, my gang, D'you wanna be in my gang, Oh yeah!
D'you wanna be in my gang, my gang, my gang, D'you wanna be in my gang?
I'm the leader, I'm the leader, I'm the leader of the gang I am!
I'm the leader, I'm the leader, well there's no one like the man I am!
No reference to the man.

Very juvenile.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 24-Aug-25 20:47:04

Like MAGA? equivalent to a red baseball cap?