Last edited by O2HeN2; 09-09-2015 at 16:51.
YOU are the first responder. Police, fire and medical are SECOND responders.
When seconds count, the police are mere minutes away...
Gun registration is gun confiscation in slow motion.
My feedback: https://www.ar-15.co/threads/53226-O2HeN2
That's talking about when the staffs are of equal height. If unequal height, US flag should be on the tallest one (and in the center if possible)
ETA:
Another way of saying it would be "to the left of the intended viewer." In the example photos, a line of equal-height poles runs parallel to the wall of a building. It is much more likely that someone will be viewing the flags from the street/parking lot than from in between the poles and the building. Thus the American flag should be the "leftmost" from the intended viewer's perspective, and it is in those photos.
Last edited by Rumline; 09-09-2015 at 18:47.
Were you ever in the military? Reason I ask is because the way I've always thought of it is like this: A line of flags is like a squad of soldiers standing in formation. When a platoon or company is lined up where do the squad leaders stand? On the far right side of the formation, looking forward (which means that if you are facing towards the formation, the squad leaders will be on your left as you look at the formation.)
If a row of flags is displayed in front of a building like that, then the building itself is at the "back" of the formation and the area in front of the flags is the "front." In that case, the American flag should be on the left as you look towards the building or on the right if you are in the building and looking outward.
In a case where a set of flags is in an open park or something, I think what you have to do is designate one direction to be the "front" and then place the flags accordingly.