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After flying his American flag upside down attracted police attention, Shenango Township resident Dennis Shacklock turned to flying a white flag that symbolizes surrender outside his home on state Route 318 on Wednesday.
Tom Davidson/Herald


Published December 17, 2008 09:57 pm - As a veteran of the siege of Khe Sanh in Vietnam, Dennis Shacklock remembers watching men die for their country. As a 61-year-old Shenango Township resident who pays attention to national affairs, Shacklock’s become a disgruntled American.

Flying Old Glory upside down
Display draws visit from police

By Tom Davidson
Herald Staff Writer

SHENANGO TOWNSHIP

As a veteran of the siege of Khe Sanh in Vietnam, Dennis Shacklock remembers watching men die for their country. As a 61-year-old Shenango Township resident who pays attention to national affairs, Shacklock’s become a disgruntled American.

“We’re on the brink of collapse,” Shacklock said Wednesday, sitting at his dining room table with his wife Kathleen and neighbor Tom Hunt.

With the economy showing no sign of improvement and wary of the election of Barack Obama as president, Shacklock decided to showcase his feelings by flying the American flag upside down in front of his home on state Route 318.

He did it immediately after the election and again this week as bad news about the economy built.

Monday evening, Southwest Mercer County Regional police knocked on his door.

“They wanted to know if everything was OK,” Shacklock said. “The one officer said ‘Do you know you’ve got your flag …’

“I told them it was my flag.”

Police were dispatched to check on Shacklock’s home after someone reported the upside-down flag to 911, Southwest police detective Capt. Doug Long said.

One of the policemen at the scene is a veteran and told Shacklock the way he was flying the flag was disrespectful to veterans, Shacklock said.

“He mentioned how people gave blood for that flag,” Shacklock said.

He explained to the police that as a Vietnam veteran he knew that, but that it was his flag to fly, he said.

“I kept telling them it’s my flag,” he said.

The American flag should only be flown upside down “as a signal of dire distress” according to the U.S. Flag Code.

That’s the condition the country’s in, Shacklock said.

“I think our country’s in distress with the administration we’re going to get,” Shacklock said of president-elect Barack Obama.



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