Crime: This Flag's Not For Burning
More than two years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag is a constitutionally protected form of free expression. But some Southerners aren't about to make it easy for protesters to burn another flag they hold dear: the Confederate Stars and Bars.
Last week a municipal judge in Shreveport, La., sentenced Ronald Hamilton to four days of community service for torching a Confederate flag outside the city's courthouse last July to protest a monument to Confederate soldiers. Since the city has no ordinance prohibiting flag burning, Hamilton was found guilty of violating a ban on illegal burning. Judge...
Email, Password or Region is incorrect
A required form parameter was missing.
The System is currently down. Please try again in a few minutes.
Email Address is invalid
Password is blank
Most Popular »
- Your Turn, Canada: A Second-By-Second Look at Jeremy Lin Lighting Up Toronto
- What's in Your Lipstick? FDA Finds Lead in 400 Shades
- Linsanity Heads East, Linfects China and Taiwan
- Iowa Welcomes Back China's Next President
- Love Ever After: A Valentine’s Day Special
- Can Jeremy Lin End The MSG/Time Warner Cable War?
- Rick Santorum Wants to Fight 'The Dangers Of Contraception'
- After Whitney Houston, Musicians Say: I'm Afraid
- 50 Best iPhone Apps 2012
- Top 10 Famous Love Letters
- Iowa Welcomes Back China's Next President
- With Syria's Rebels: A Visit to a Bombmaker's Factory
- Harvard's Hoops Star Is Asian. Why's That a Problem?
- Study: Lead Poisoning Could Lurk in Spices
- Beirut: Where Valentine's Day Belongs to Another Kind of Saint
- Friends With Benefits
- Europe's Deep Freeze: Why Climate Change Is Not (Entirely) to Blame
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- Los Angeles: 10 Things to Do
- Children of the New India: How Economic Reforms Impacted Upon the Young




