25 June 2015

No more Stars & Bars


Justine McDaniel has an article in The Philadelphia Inquirer about the end of an era:
The doors are locked at the Valley Forge Flag Company in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania. Employees must ring a newly-installed doorbell and wait outside the dark-tinted windows for someone to let them in. Inside, phones are ringing. The Berks County flag manufacturer, one of the nation's largest, has been fielding angry calls since making headlines when it announced it would no longer make the Confederate battle flag.
The decision came in the wake of the 17 June 2015 killing of nine black church members in Charleston, South Carolina, and growing public opposition to a flag seemingly embraced by alleged shooter Dylann Roof and others as a symbol of white supremacy and slavery.
As details began to emerge about Roof's reportedly racially driven motives, including a photo of him holding the flag, Valley Forge Flag leaders called a meeting to discuss the blue-and-red Confederate banners they stitch and sell. "It wasn't even a business decision, it's a moral decision," said Christopher Binner, vice president of marketing and sales. "It was an easy decision in light of the tragedy that happened."
Valley Forge Flag employees pulled Confederate flags from orders that were about to ship. (Customers received a store credit.) The next day, the company became one of the first manufacturers to publicly declare it would no longer make them.
"The flag offends people. That's a fact," Binner said. "I wish we would've deleted that flag ten years ago."
The family-run company was founded in 1882 and started making flags during the Depression, when it opened a sewing factory in Spring City. Now it has four plants in South Carolina and three hundred employees, including 35 at the Berks County office park.
Its American flags have been with soldiers at war, on the caskets of US presidents, and on space shuttles. Its clients include retailers such as Home Depot, Costco, and the US government.
Binner said his company makes millions of flags a year, and the Confederate banner represented a minuscule portion of sales. But it remained in stock, because some customers buy it for historical reasons, he said.
Other flag makers said that their Confederate flags were most often bought for Civil War reenactments or museums.
After the decision, the calls poured in to Valley Forge Flag from all over the country, Binner said. Some people thanked the company for nixing the product. But many others said they were unhappy. Some said they would never buy a Valley Forge flag again.
The company has not received any threats, but Binner said he was worried about the safety of employees. "When you make a decision like that, sadly, you choose sides," he said.
Among five of the largest flag-makers in the country, all but one have announced their intent to cease production of the Confederate banner.
At FlagSource, the holdout, a spokeswoman said that the company had no comment and could not say whether it even sells Confederate flags.
FlagZone, a manufacturer in Gilbertsville in Montgomery County, was another company that stopped production. "I would love for every person who has a Confederate flag to replace it with the American flag, because we are the United States of America and we should be proud of that," said president Dan Ziegler.
At Annin Flagmakers in Roseland, New Jersey, senior vice president of sales and marketing Mary Repke said she received a few "hate emails" after her company joined the ban, but the company had not increased security.
Despite the backlash, Binner remained confident he made the right decision. Still, he said he wasn't sure how much impact the decision would have on changing people's views. "I think it's going to take a lot more than eliminating a flag, unfortunately," he said.
Rico says it's too bad; it's a pretty flag, just not what it stands for... (Though reenactors better stock up now, while they still can.)

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