Flag Day — A Moment to Look Back, and Forward
On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress adopted a flag for a country still fighting for its existence — thirteen stars, thirteen stripes, and a bold declaration that a new nation had stepped onto the world stage. It wasn’t just a design choice. It was an identity, a statement of intent, and a promise that the people beneath it would keep shaping what that identity meant. Flag Day invites us to pause and consider that long arc of effort. The flag has flown in moments of triumph and in moments when the nation was forced to confront its own shortcomings. It has been carried by immigrants seeking a future, by soldiers in danger, by marchers demanding civil rights, and by ordinary citizens who strengthen their communities in quiet, steady ways. A flag is cloth. The meaning is what we bring to it. Today is a reminder that the work of forming a more perfect union is never finished. Each generation inherits the responsibility to move the country closer to its ideals — freedom, dignity...