Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Bureaucracy


I found these stickers on my walk home yesterday evening -- an interesting, and encouraging, response to the right-wing, anti-immigrant demonstrations that occurred over the weekend! That flag is the St. George Cross, the national flag of England, and it's often waved by anti-immigrant demonstrators (remember the "Send Them Home" guy in Blackpool?). I like the idea of reclaiming it for everyone.

Flags are weird things, aren't they? A scrap of cloth, and yet a powerful symbol -- and a lot of us disagree about what's being symbolized. I'd argue that the American flag symbolizes rights of expression that could include, ironically, burning the American flag. And yet a lot of people think it symbolizes pride, and that burning it somehow contradicts or offends its message. (Not that I'm about to burn a flag. I'm just using that as an example.)

I've never been a flag-waver. I think I've hung a national flag exactly once, and that was in the immediate aftermath of 9/11. Like a lot of my neighbors, I put one in my apartment window in New York as a symbol of unity and recovery. Oh, and I waved the British flag at our citizenship ceremony, with all the other immigrants!

Speaking of which, I applied for my first British passport last night. I'm hoping to get it in time for Tenerife at Thanksgiving. According to the Home Office web site that shouldn't be a problem, though they're making me jump through some hoops -- like I once again have to find someone of professional authority to verify that my picture is in fact me, even though I just jumped this same hurdle for my citizenship application. It's not a big deal -- I can get someone at work to do it easily enough -- but it seems a silly requirement. Don't they have my picture on file in some big computer? Can't they just look at that and see that the passport photo is authentic?


Here are some more stickers and signs I've found posted in recent weeks. Bureaucracy makes me a grumpy cat.


I would like to have seen "an exhibition of giant backlit SX-70 Polaroids," but alas, it was two years ago. The homage to one of my favorite movies was eye-catching, though.


There are several places in the world where kindness is not on display -- Ukraine, Sudan, Myanmar, Yemen -- and Gaza is definitely among them.


Can you stand another garden cam video? More good shots of the fox and our regular visiting cats. At 2:02, the fox appears very agitated and moving fast -- I'm not sure what that was about. Maybe it had a scary encounter with some other animal. And at 2:17, I'm mowing the lawn, so be ready for some engine noise! I was surprised the cats were out wandering around in the rain. I thought cats hated water?

14 comments:

  1. I am not a flag waver, though I did have a small Ukrainian flag and a small Australian flag in the pot plant on my front porch for the first year of that war, then the weather decimated the flags and I haven't replaced them. I had a small Ukrainain flag with the words I stand with Ukraine stuck to my mailbox, but someone ripped it off and stomped on it, I could see the tread marks from the shoes.

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  2. Oh dear! Mowing the grass in flip flops is foolhardy Steve. Take my advice and wear steel toe-capped boots or shoes in future. After all, if you lost your toes your walking days would be over and every night you would be torturing yourself with "if onlys": "If only I had taken Wise Pudding's advice. Oh woe is me!"

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    1. Totally agree with you, YP, on the flip flops. On the other hand, correct me if I am wrong, who climbs ladders to clean out the gutters? Presumably with a safety net to catch you.

      What does surprise me that you didn't respond to Steve ruminating on flags since - as sure as high water - every so often one of your quizzes will be about flags. What's the fascination?

      U

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  3. Kindness seems to be in short supply everywhere these days. I thought, during the pandemic, that people were becoming more kind and tolerant but I was sorely mistaken.

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  4. I’ve never been a flag waver. Even the flags on everyone’s car antennas made me uncomfortable after 9/11. It made me worry about the America First mentality. I enjoy your garden cam videos. So many beautiful animals. And so exciting to see the rare Blue-shirted Stevie emerge around 2:17!

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  5. Steve, the only flag I wave is the white one.

    U

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  6. Flags flying from flag poles stating a common good is perhaps what should be there, not draped around people. Cats and fox seem to get on well together in the video, the path proving an interesting place to wander through.

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  7. It's always entertaining to see garden video and the foxes are quite lovely. I know some people deplore them, but we have taken over their habitats. Fox paths are traditional.

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  8. There may have been a time in the past when I might of waved an Australian flag, but not now. Flag waving has become so loaded in Australia, and no longer acceptable in decent society.

    You were mowing the lawn in flip flops? My lawn was very neat and perfectly smooth when I mowed the lawn in sneakers. somehow a wheel went up onto a raised rock surface or something. It was forty plus years ago, and I can't remember the detail now, but the mower came down on my foot and took off my right big toenail. It resulted in a trip to emergency at a hospital.

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    1. You know, I did consider whether or not to wear my flip-flops, but it seemed safe enough since the mower is "way up there" and my feet are "way back here." But after your story, I'll think twice!

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  9. Bureaucracy is the thing in life that makes me the craziest; nothing is ever simple.
    As for the flag, I find it ironic that the people who are anti-flag burning are the same ones who wear flag bikinis and shirts and shorts and overalls.
    They don't get it.

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  10. I don't go in for flag waving, except one day after 9.11, to defy the terrorists. And now I occasionally post a flag on my blog to reclaim it from the right wing. I've been posting flags and memes in support of Ukraine daily since the Russian invasion.
    I've been reading about freedom of speech and how it works both ways, interesting and sobering thought.
    You make me want a camera to spot the comings and goings on my deck. We have foxes and the occasional coyote and there's one local wandering cat. I wonder who comes out at night.

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  11. Flags have reasons- like in the tale "Not Without My Daughter" when she finally escapes to see the american flag waving , safety and home in that building. As for pride, the only flag is rainbow, otherwise it gets weird... complicated. Scrap of cloth becomes a reason to be an asshole. Looks like the UK is going down the dumb amercan path.-the horror of the orange visit "Welcome, Fascist autocrat". Dignity fallen into theater to save the UK from ridiculous tariffs. A humiliating moment for the KING. No balls.

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