-
In 1989,
-
an artist by the name of Dread Scott,
-
who has also graced the TED stage,
-
created a piece of art in Chicago,
-
where he simply placed
an American flag on the ground
-
and then invited you the viewer
to go and stand on that flag
-
and record how it felt in a journal.
-
And to me, one of the most powerful things
written in that journal, in essence, says,
-
"Why are we so OK
-
with homeless people,
-
with human beings laying on the ground,
-
but not flags?"
-
And to some of you,
this piece of art is quite disturbing.
-
And that's kind of the point
of this talk --
-
not to upset you or to make you mad
-
but to prove to you that flags
have an incredible power,
-
and that even if you think
you don't care about flags, you do.
-
You know you do.
-
Alright.
-
By the end of it,
I hope that you're inspired
-
to go out and harness this power of flags
and fight for a better world.
-
But before we get there,
-
we're going to start
on the opposite end of the spectrum.
-
And before I show you the next stuff,
I need to say that anything I show here
-
is not an endorsement,
-
it's usually quite the opposite.
-
But more than anything,
what I want to do is create a space here
-
where we can look
at these flags, these designs,
-
and examine how they make us feel.
-
We're going to talk about our emotions.
-
Is that OK with everybody?
-
OK.
-
Are you ready for your first flag?
-
Cool, we'll start with an easy one.
-
That was a joke. (Laughs)
-
So, some of you may be a little bit uneasy
sitting in a room with this.
-
I'm certainly feeling uneasy
standing in front of it.
-
Some of you may be feeling
a little bit of pride.
-
And that's understandable. This is Texas.
This is not a rare sight, is it?
-
But let's start with the facts.
-
So this is not the Confederate flag. OK?
-
This is the battle flag
of the Army of Northern Virginia
-
led by General Robert E. Lee.
-
So next time someone tells you
that this is their heritage,
-
unless their family fought
for that very specific militia,
-
they're wrong, alright?
-
And you have a flag expert's
permission to tell them so.
-
This flag rose into prominence
during the mid-1950s and '60s
-
as a response to the growing
Civil Rights Movement.
-
And then of course today,
-
it has come to represent
the Confederacy to most of us.
-
But I shouldn't have to remind you
what the Confederacy is.
-
It was a rogue nation
-
that rose up against the United States,
-
waged war on the US,
-
and at one point in time,
-
this was one of the most
un-American things you could have.
-
But yet, this flag is protected
-
by the same laws that protect
the United States flag
-
in the states of Florida, Georgia,
-
South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana.
-
But let's pick on Georgia
for a second, shall we?
-
So in 1956,
-
a few years after desegregation
was mandated in public schools,
-
Georgia changed their state flag to this.
-
I think everyone watching can agree
-
that this was not meant to be a flag
that every Georgian was proud to fly
-
outside of their home, was it?
-
No.
-
Just like all of the Confederate statues
erected in the mid-1950s and '60s,
-
this was meant to be a symbol
of who was in charge
-
and who was not.
-
This remained the flag of Georgia
-
until the year 2001,
-
and in that year, they changed their flag
-
to this.
-
Now, as a flag expert, I can tell you:
this is officially ugly.
-
OK? It's OK to laugh at this flag.
-
It's ugly, and because it's so ugly,
-
that's one of the reasons
they changed it just two years later.
-
They had a referendum
-
where they got to choose
between that thing
-
and then what is now
the current flag of Georgia.
-
Now some of you might be wondering,
-
"Wait a second, Michael --
-
if that before wasn't
the Confederate flag,
-
what was the Confederate flag?"
-
Georgia flies the first flag
of the Confederate States of America
-
to this day.
-
They just slapped their state seal on it.
-
Well, let's go back
to our emotions for a second.
-
That didn't punch you in the gut
as much as the other one did, did it?
-
Right?
-
And that's why I love flags.
-
They are the simplest pieces of design,
-
usually just two or three colors,
-
just some bars or stripes.
-
But yet, they can invoke
the deepest emotions within us.
-
They'll make us swell with pride
-
or burn with hatred.
-
We will die for a flag
-
or even kill for one.
-
One of my favorite designers,
his name is Wally Olins,
-
they call him the father
of nation branding,
-
and he's quoted as saying
-
that "Everyone wants to belong,
-
and then they want to display
symbols of belonging."
-
And it's crazy that these pieces of cloth
that are just sewn together or dyed
-
come to be such a sacred item,
-
and that's because they become
parts of our identity.
-
They are powerful tools to unify
-
but equally powerful tools to divide.
-
You ready for the next flag?
-
Right.
-
Take a moment.
-
Really examine how you felt
when this hit the screen.
-
I'm going to change
the slide pretty quickly
-
so you don't take pictures of me
in front of this one.
-
(Laughter)
-
Alright?
-
So Germany after World War I,
-
it was in a pretty bad state,
-
and a young Adolf Hitler had a lot of --
let's call them -- "ideas,"
-
of how Germany got to where they'd gotten
-
and how to get them out.
-
He spent entire chapters
in his book "Mein Kampf,"
-
which I don't recommend reading,
-
about how Germany lost World War I
-
partially because the British
had better graphic design
-
and better propaganda.
-
So, as the Nazi Party rose,
-
Hitler created one of the thickest
brand guides I've ever seen.
-
It's thicker than most
company brand guides today,
-
and in it, he details titles and uniforms
-
and lots and lots of flags.
-
Hitler knew the power of flags.
-
He says in "Mein Kampf,"
-
"The new flag ... should prove
effective as a large poster,
-
[because] in hundreds
of thousands of cases
-
a really striking emblem
may be the first cause
-
of awakening interest
in a movement."
-
He was an artist, after all.
-
He knew the power
of visual identity and uniforms
-
could reignite the German identity.
-
And to millions of Germans,
this was a welcome sign.
-
But of course, this was also
a mark of death to others.
-
We don't often think of flags as weapons,
-
but like the Confederate battle flag,
-
the Germans used their flag
-
to make an out-group feel unwelcome
-
and less than.
-
You see, when you create a flag,
you immediately do two things:
-
you create an in-group,
-
a group that's meant
to be represented by the symbol,
-
but then, inevitably,
you create an out-group.
-
And usually, that's subtle.
-
It's a byproduct.
-
It's usually not the intent.
-
But the Germans were very clear
as to who was represented by the swastika
-
and who was not.
-
In 1935, Jewish people were banned
from flying German flags.
-
And in this way,
-
the Germans, maybe more than
any other time in history,
-
used the dual power of flags
-
to unite but also to divide.
-
Flags were used as identity weapons.
-
And now, in 2019, the Nazi flag
is banned from being flown
-
by anyone in Germany
-
and anyone in Austria, in Hungary,
in Russia and in Ukraine.
-
Think about that.
-
It's a piece of cloth, but it's banned.
-
On its face, that sounds crazy.
-
But I don't think anyone
in this room would disagree
-
that it's probably good.
-
Sounds a lot like a weapon.
-
As a vexillologist,
-
sometimes the most interesting
thing about a flag
-
is not so much its design,
-
but it's those laws around the flag.
-
For instance,
-
in India, to create an Indian flag,
-
you must use a hand-spun
cloth named "khadi."
-
If you make a flag out of anything else,
-
you could go to jail
for up to three years.
-
It's crazy.
-
Here in Texas,
-
we've all heard
-
that the Texas flag is the only state flag
that can fly at the same height
-
as the US, flag, right?
-
Because we were a nation
before we were a state.
-
Who here has heard that?
-
Yeah.
-
Well, I'm here to tell you
that is completely false. OK?
-
First of all, we were not the only state
that was a nation before joining up.
-
And secondly, all state flags can fly
at the same height as the US flag
-
according to the US flag code.
-
And I don't have to ask you
how you feel about this one, right?
-
Most of us grew up pledging allegiance
to this every morning,
-
knowing we should never
let it touch the ground, etc.
-
We take our flag code very seriously
here in the United States.
-
You remember, recently some NFL players
kneeling during the national anthem.
-
It was a big controversy.
-
They were breaking the flag code.
-
It states during the national anthem,
-
stand at attention,
hand at the heart, etc.
-
But what was fascinating to me
as a vexillologist
-
is that I didn't see
anyone getting upset
-
when something like this happens.
-
The flag code says, "The flag should never
be carried flat or horizontally,
-
but always aloft and free."
-
So sometimes during
the exact same national anthem,
-
this was being done,
and no one's upset.
-
Or this. This happens all the time.
-
The flag code is clear:
-
"No part of the flag should ever be used
as a costume or on an athletic uniform."
-
This is Texas A&M baseball,
-
not to get them in trouble,
but this happens all the time,
-
especially in November.
-
I'm sure, I can almost guarantee
when you leave here tonight,
-
you will see on the back
of someone's car or truck
-
a black and white American flag
with a blue stripe,
-
a thin blue line, right?
-
Blue Lives Matter.
-
That breaks the flag code
in multiple ways.
-
But all of these things are done
with the best intent.
-
No one's here to argue that.
-
But of course they break
a section of the flag code
-
titled "Respect for the Flag,"
-
so by putting this on your uniform,
-
you are legally disrespecting the flag.
-
And what I find interesting
-
is that those NFL players
kneeling during the anthem
-
and the people who would put
Blue Lives Matters stickers on their car
-
are both on the opposite end
of a very big issue,
-
but they're both breaking
the exact same law,
-
a law that is 100 percent unenforceable.
-
In fact, it was Dread Scott's
piece of art in 1989
-
that led the Supreme Court to rule
that the flag code is just a guideline.
-
You cannot be prosecuted
for breaking the flag code.
-
You cannot be forced to be patriotic.
-
So why, then, have all of these
little laws around how we use our flag
-
if you can't enforce them?
-
And that's because a nation
-
is a fragile collective idea.
-
It only exists in our minds.
-
Can I see this? Thank you.
-
Sometimes a flag is the only
tangible symbol of that idea.
-
Right? Our unity is sometimes
only held together by literal threads.
-
And that's powerful.
-
The flag code is meant to preserve
and protect that fragile idea,
-
while also protecting
your right to break it.
-
And that's what's special
about the United States, right?
-
And that's what's unique about our flag.
-
Our flag is amazing.
-
It has changed more than
any other flag in the world.
-
It's the flag code that says
when a new state is created,
-
a star shall be added
to the union of the flag,
-
and such addition shall take place
on the fourth day of July.
-
Our flag is unique because
it is meant to grow as we grow.
-
By design and by law,
-
it is meant to change with us.
-
It's a living symbol of our individuality,
-
our diversity in the stars
-
and our unity.
-
We have a gift in the United States
to have a flag that is inclusive.
-
If the Nazi flag was an identity weapon,
-
the United States flag, by design alone,
stands in direct contrast.
-
And I have to say,
as a vexillologist in 2019,
-
using this flag
-
as an identity weapon against anyone
-
disrespects it far more
than letting it touch the ground
-
or any one of the other little laws
that we break every day.
-
Right?
-
This flag is a symbol of our unity.
-
We should never use this as a weapon
against someone else.
-
I resonate so deeply with the person
who wrote in Dread Scott's journal,
-
"We should never value the symbol
over the thing that it symbolizes.
-
We should never value a piece of cloth
over a human life."
-
And if you're ever going to use
a piece of cloth as a weapon,
-
you should never use this one,
-
not when it has always
had room for more stars.
-
Hopefully by now, you've felt
the power of flags,
-
and you can see what they can do.
-
So what if we harnessed that power,
-
and we used it to fight
for something greater?
-
This is the flag of Earth,
-
designed by Oskar Pernefeldt of Sweden.
-
Just imagine with me for a second:
-
What if we celebrated our humanity
-
as much if not more
-
than we celebrate our nationalities?
-
As we become a spacefaring civilization
and we go off into the stars,
-
what do our nations mean anyway
-
when you're standing on the surface
of Mars or any other planet?
-
And then of course, back here on Earth,
-
as our planet is facing a climate crisis,
-
as our climate could be unlivable in
our children or grandchildren's lifetime,
-
I believe we need a strong symbol, a flag,
-
to unite us to fight,
-
not just as nations,
-
but as a species.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)