Trump also likes to walk all over their symbols. Think of him wagging that snake staff with a silly face from Halloween at the White House, or the Alice and Wonderland reference with the goofy white rabbit, or the old TV commercial where he eats the pizza backwards. I actually like his approach of tromping all over their symbols rather than bowing down to them in fear or even censoring them ourselves because of the cabal’s associations. When Trump submitted his design for the new WTC to New York after 9/11, it was to build them back exactly as they were before, only higher, and resistant to planes. That actually would have somewhat erased the symbolism of that day.
The gold fringe on the flag can indicate the US Corp, but it is also the Flag of the President. In this case, I'd pay attention to whether the eagle is atop the flagpole, which denotes the primary difference between the two.
Actually not even the "flag of the president." Nothing about it in the US Flag Code. Only mention is in US Army regulations manual (gold at garrisons and when on parade). There is more compelling evidence in the connection with maritime law, but even that is a stretch. The question is whether the people using gols fringed flags are doing it intentionally because of some type of military justification, or they just don't know about the actual law/regulation.
Trump also likes to walk all over their symbols. Think of him wagging that snake staff with a silly face from Halloween at the White House, or the Alice and Wonderland reference with the goofy white rabbit, or the old TV commercial where he eats the pizza backwards. I actually like his approach of tromping all over their symbols rather than bowing down to them in fear or even censoring them ourselves because of the cabal’s associations. When Trump submitted his design for the new WTC to New York after 9/11, it was to build them back exactly as they were before, only higher, and resistant to planes. That actually would have somewhat erased the symbolism of that day.
The gold fringe on the flag can indicate the US Corp, but it is also the Flag of the President. In this case, I'd pay attention to whether the eagle is atop the flagpole, which denotes the primary difference between the two.
Actually not even the "flag of the president." Nothing about it in the US Flag Code. Only mention is in US Army regulations manual (gold at garrisons and when on parade). There is more compelling evidence in the connection with maritime law, but even that is a stretch. The question is whether the people using gols fringed flags are doing it intentionally because of some type of military justification, or they just don't know about the actual law/regulation.