I can only agree. The overuse of this rendered honor has watered down it's significance. I have begun to associate it with bumper stickers now.
There are many forms of "flag waving" and in my opinion, to attempt to "say it all" in the space of a T-shirt or bumper sticker is to place in a small box issues that are intellectually overwhelming and beyond the comprehensive scope of the average working "Joe". The reality is that human events are just not that simple that one can sum it all up with one little catch phrase or a smart ass one lined thread post.
Everyone wants, deserves, and has a right to their voice, but to fly that "voice" flag high from such a limited and uninformed perspective is to me like waving around a loaded gun in a public place or like putting an ox cart driver in the cockpit of an F-18.
Many of us have been guilty of it for whatever the reasons; insecurity, wanting to belong or be apart of something bigger.
People take misguided and short sighted stances on many things ranging from religion to politics and all the little sub categories that are attached because it is psychologically empowering to do so.
If I truly had a working grasp of politics, economics, and the governing of the world by the powers that be, and realistically thought that I had at least a snowballs chance in hell of changing things for the sake of all mankind, I probably wouldn't be on this site writing this.
I've attempted and failed to make people understand the misuse of the symbol of our nations ideals (which are also highly relative and subjective to limited individual perceptions) and this in my mind is a relatively simple standard of flag etiquette.
So who am I to try to place in a box any issues that are simple beyond my perspective, intellectual scope and grasp. I can't remember the last time I flew anyone's flag. They are all always perceived in a different way, so what is the point.
But it did mean something to me at one time... before I put aside childish dillusions.