Gay Pride Flag On Top Of US Military Monument

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Home Forums Political Corner Gay Pride Flag On Top Of US Military Monument

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This topic contains 7 replies, has 7 voices, and was last updated by ResidentEvil7  ResidentEvil7 2 years, 6 months ago.

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    Posts
  • #527066

    Anonymous
    6

    Thoughts??

    #527078
    +1

    Anonymous
    14

    It don’t mean much to me. Gay men have been serving and dying in the Military for, s~~~, I don’t know how long… They were all just in the closet. Now if it were a Venus symbol I would be outraged.

    #527124
    +2
    Faust For Science
    Faust For Science
    Participant
    22521

    Right or wrong. If one is going to troll that is how it is done.

    I have seen far worse forms of trolling.

    If you know that back story to the events shown from that statue you will know that that photo and event was actually a recreation of a previous event.

    Because the first group of men whom did that used a smaller flag, the photographer got another set of men to do the perform the same action with a larger flag.

    The first set of men do not receive any credit, while the second set of men became famous.

    #527125
    +1
    Slayher
    Slayher
    Participant
    2074

    Military monuments – no.
    Service members grave sites – no problem.

    #527131
    Faust For Science
    Faust For Science
    Participant
    22521

    Military monuments – no.
    Service members grave sites – no problem.

    That is the problem.

    I believe grave site are more sacred than monuments.

    #527135
    +2
    Keymaster
    Keymaster
    Keymaster

    Interesting responses.

    It wasn’t the gay flag they sacrificed themselves to raise. It was the American flag. Three Marines in the photograph, Sergeant Michael Strank, Corporal Harlon Block, and Private First Class Franklin Sousley were killed in action over the next few days.

    The other three were Corporals (then Private First Class) Rene Gagnon, Ira Hayes, and Harold Schultz, who only received Marine Corps recognition (as being one of the six) in June 2016 – his identity having previously been confused with that of a Fleet Marine Force corpsman.

    So a gay photobombs it.
    Just another example of “confused identity”.

    Let’s go back to 1943. Would you have picked up a baronet and charged into battle for gays to have the right to parade naked in the streets? Or would you have been more preoccupied with other more important things. Like where your next meal would come from… or if you would have one.

    This photo is no different than the Aushwitz “lol” selfie girl. They have no idea what they are doing, or what it means.

    If you keep doing what you've always done... you're gonna keep getting what you always got.
    #527140
    IRuleMe
    IRuleMe
    Participant

    That’s pretty funny.

    #528018
    ResidentEvil7
    ResidentEvil7
    Participant
    9543

    Just another example of gays acting special and important so they need to shove their lifestyle down everyone’s throats. Be gay and be proud of it, but don’t shove it in everyone’s face and demand them to accept it.

    Keymaster is right. The military for the past 241 years didn’t fight for the gay rainbow flag; they fought for the American flag. American flags and its heroes need to be respected over the f~~ flag.

    https://themanszone.webs.com/

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