Adrian Cronaueris a former United States Air Force sergeant and radio personality whose experiences as an innovative disc jockey in Vietnam inspired the 1987 film Good Morning, Vietnam... (wikipedia)
Our flag is not just one of many political points of view. Rather, the flag is a symbol of our national unity.
Martin Luther King, Jr. didn't carry just a piece of cloth to symbolize his belief in racial equality; he carried the American flag.
The American flag represents all of us and all the values we hold sacred.
Worrying that banning flag desecration would inhibit free speech reveals a misunderstanding of the flag's fundamental nature.
I was faced more with apathy than opposition.
A corollary is that, when laws are out of touch with the people, those laws can and should be changed - from the most simple local regulations to the highest law of the land, our federal Constitution.
Our nation is built on the bedrock principle that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.
Without amendments we would never even have had the Bill of Rights.
One of the things I learned in law school is that there's nothing wrong or undesirable or dishonorable or destructive about amending the Constitution.
Giving people what they want isn't just good radio; it's also the right way to run a country.
The concept that you cannot own the airwaves has caused far more harm than good.
It is the will of the American people that we have a right to protect our flag and this can only be accomplished by passing a Constitutional amendment.
The electronic spectrum is the only natural resource in which there's no such thing as private property rights. You can't own a piece of the spectrum.
It's not written in the Constitution or anything else.... Congress, just out of the clear blue sky, said the airwaves belong to the people, which means, in essence, that it belongs to Congress.