Your world is awesome! But all of your American flags are backwards…
According to the U.S. Flag Code (4 U.S.C. Chapter 1), when hanging the American flag vertically or horizontally against a wall, window, or door, the union (blue field) must be at the top, to the flag’s own right, and the observer’s left. The flag should never touch the ground, be displayed upside down (except in distress), or be draped.
The flag code is actually pretty intricate and interesting with just how many rules there are. You’d be surprised how many people don’t know them, even among military and government personnel.
Dangerous-Quit7821 on
Pretty good. BTW. The stars on the US flag go on the left as you’re looking at it.
2 Comments
Your world is awesome! But all of your American flags are backwards…
According to the U.S. Flag Code (4 U.S.C. Chapter 1), when hanging the American flag vertically or horizontally against a wall, window, or door, the union (blue field) must be at the top, to the flag’s own right, and the observer’s left. The flag should never touch the ground, be displayed upside down (except in distress), or be draped.
The flag code is actually pretty intricate and interesting with just how many rules there are. You’d be surprised how many people don’t know them, even among military and government personnel.
Pretty good. BTW. The stars on the US flag go on the left as you’re looking at it.