Archive -> September 10, 2005
Two American flags
Many Americans do not know that there are two national flags, one with yellow fringes, which was added to the flag in 1959 AD, and one without.
First, the yellow fringes are called “military yellow fringes.” Many people don’t know it. However, there are actually two national flags, one for the military government and another for the civil. The two flags are thought to be the same, yet there are significant differences between them. The flag that you see flying today in schools, municipal buildings, courtrooms, etc. is actually for military affairs only. So, your question should be, “why is the military flag flying in civil buildings?” The flag that is flown during peacetime has vertical stripes, and blue stars on a white field. You can see this design, which bears civil jurisdiction, in the U.S. Coast Guard and Customs flag, their service insignias replace the fifty stars.
The flag with yellow fringes is the military flag, which is the federal government. The flag without yellow fringes is the Union of the Sovereign States, who are under the Constitution.
All elected officials, judges, law enforcement agents and others take the same oath to uphold the laws of the Constitution and the laws within the state in which they live, in the presence of this flag with the yellow fringes. This means that they really aren’t upholding the laws of the Constitution, whether they know it or not. They say the allegiance to the yellow fringed flag and say the words “and to the republic for which it stands.” This is further deception because the yellow fringed flag does not stand for the republic, which is the Union Sovereign States. So again, the yellow-fringed American flag is not the constitutional flag of the republic. Anyone who says allegiance to it is violating their oath of office and the constitution of the United States.
Excerpted from Let’s Set The Record Straight by Dr. Malachi Z. York