Veteran burns American flag in front of White House on day of controversial Trump executive order

President Donald Trump signed an order targeting flag desecration as a veteran burned the flag outside the White House, sparking a First Amendment debate.


Veteran burns American flag in front of White House on day of controversial Trump executive order
1.9 k views

Footage from outside the White House on the same day shows a man who identified himself as a veteran speaking through a megaphone while burning the flag.

"I am a 20-year veteran of the United States Army," the man says as the flag burns at his feet. "It is our First Amendment right to burn this flag, regardless of what the president says."

At one point in the video, another man approaches the veteran, but it is unclear what he says.

The veteran responds by repeatedly telling him to "get away from me."

Trump has nevertheless faced pushback from the right on social media after signing the order, with conservatives largely defending flag-burning as a First Amendment right.

"I would never in a million years harm the American flag. But a president telling me I can't has me as close as I'll ever be to lighting one on fire. I am a free American citizen. And if I ever feel like torching one, I will. This is garbage," conservative radio host Jesse Kelly wrote on X.

"Flag burning is vile but the government has no right to control speech or expression," radio host Dana Loesch wrote.

The Supreme Court ruled in the 1989 case Texas v. Johnson that burning the American flag is a form of symbolic speech that is protected by the First Amendment. Trump's executive order, which directs the attorney general to "pursue litigation to clarify the scope of the First Amendment exceptions" in the realm of flag burning, signals there will likely be upcoming litigation challenging the 1989 ruling.

Fox News' Lindsey Kornick contributed to this report

you may also like

Construction crew unearths surprising 300-year-old cannon while digging in historic city
  • by foxnews
  • descember 09, 2016
Construction crew unearths surprising 300-year-old cannon while digging in historic city

In only the third such discovery in 30 years, according to archaeologists, construction workers in Kingston upon Hull unearthed a rare 300-year-old cast-iron cannon.

read more