It’s an election year, [tag]Republicans[/tag] are desperate, so it stands to reason that a constitutional [tag]amendment[/tag] on [tag]flag burning[/tag] is making progress in the [tag]Senate[/tag].
A Senate panel approved a measure on Thursday that would change the [tag]Constitution[/tag] to let Congress [tag]ban[/tag] burning of the [tag]American flag[/tag], setting up an election-year debate over a perennial hot-button issue.
The measure passed the Senate Judiciary constitution subcommittee by a vote of 6 to 3. […]
“There are limits on speech, and the balance is tipped in my mind that so many people are so grossly offended by the burning of the flag,” said Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Arlen [tag]Specter[/tag], who heads the Judiciary Committee.
Oh, I see. If a lot of people find certain speech offensive, we should alter the Constitution and amend the First Amendment, for the first time in American history, to make people feel better, right? Never mind that flag-burning protests are exceedingly rare, or that veterans’ groups don’t really care about the proposal, or that every year, veterans and Boy Scouts dispose of old flags in public flag-burning ceremonies nationwide. Arlen Specter — the “moderate” — will not break party ranks on this one.
By the way, the AP story on yesterday’s subcommittee vote is accompanied by a picture of a guy burning a flag. Just for the record, the guy is in Guatemala, not the United States, and would be able to burn our flag whether Congress backed a constitutional amendment or not.