If you think you can FORCE someone to stand for the national anthem (which, along with the Pledge, is a relatively recent tradition), you’ve really missed the point.
If you think you’re furthering freedom by forcing a flag salute and silencing protest, you’ve really missed the point. If you think it’s American to force someone to respect what you respect and do the traditions that you do, you’ve really missed the point. If you think that the military is the ultimate American institution to be worshiped, you’ve really missed the point and should read Articles I and II of the Constitution.
It’s a flag. It’s a song. It’s tradition, but by no means is one required to stand, put a hand over the heart, etc. Freedom of speech means participating or not participating. A sheriff threatening to not protect Kaep is literally failing to provide equal protection under the law. A public school teacher punishing a student for not standing is arguably a 1st Amendment violation by the government.
The pomp and circumstance of the anthem are superficial, recently invented, and voluntary. If you want to respect America’s values, let people do what they want. Punishing those who don't harm others and are merely protesting, satirizing, or disrespecting puts you on the spectrum with the Charlie Hebdo attackers in my book
By the way my sister's husband was in the Army for 10 years stationed in Germany. He also happens to be black and has no issue with Kap given his different side of the street view. I have a great niece, who is a nurse, and a great nephew, six years Navy, now studying geology. In my 35 years around them, in liberal Northern California, I have seen all sorts of bias towards them. Some blatant but most very subtle. I hear some tone deaf people around here. In many ways there are two different worlds here and until you can be in both, like me, then you will never know where I come from nor understand what they deal with. I consider my nephew/niece to be half white and half black yet most all whites think they are black and respond to them that way. Talking to my nephew a few weeks ago he tells me his white friends asked him how he felt about Kap and his stance. I wonder why and lucky for them I wasn't around to take them down.