The negative option is that it’s a “no quarter” flag.
Oh, yikes. biscaynetimes.com/…/the-‘no-quarter’-flag-and-its…
Comment on [deleted]
kersploosh@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
The meaning depends on the intent of the person displaying that flag.
The innocent option that it’s military cosplay. The US military uses black or gray monochrome flags since red/white/blue is bad for camouflage. Some people think it looks badass, so they mimic it.
The negative option is that it’s a “no quarter” flag.
The negative option is that it’s a “no quarter” flag.
Oh, yikes. biscaynetimes.com/…/the-‘no-quarter’-flag-and-its…
A page not found is the scariest thing
Oh cool. Lets hope its just “murica” and not… That then. Christ.
Yep. You’ll also see a black-and-khaki version that matches the OCP camouflage pattern used on Army and Air Force combat uniforms; sometimes called the “Scorpion flag” because that was the code name for the new camouflage design.
ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
To add to this, the flags OP displayed are all reversed (the stars are in the upper right instead of upper left). That’s common in the military as it represents how a soldier would view the flag as it’s being carried by a flag bearer. It’s military cosplay.
Drop_All_Users@lemmy.world 1 year ago
If a flag is on the right side of your body (or in this case car) then it’s reversed otherwise it’s normal.
FlexibleToast@lemmy.world 1 year ago
That’s not why the starfield is on the other side. The starfield always belongs at the front. If that flag was flying from a pole and being carried by the person or vehicle that’s where the starfield would be and why that’s how it is applied. The flag should be moving forward, not retreating.