Rainbow ‘Pride’ Flag REPLACES POW/MIA Flag at Veterans Memorial Plaza

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by Jess Walters

Officials have taken down flags for POW and MIA veterans and replaced them with gay pride rainbow flags outside an executive office building at a memorial plaza in Maryland, causing outrage.

The move was spearheaded by Montgomery County Council member Evan Glass, the council’s first LGBTQ member, who helped raise the pride flag at Veterans Memorial Plaza in Rockville.

Vietnam veteran John “Bill” Williams said the flags are meant to honor soldiers still missing, saying he was upset to see them taken down.

“When I was in Vietnam, I was there six days before two guys were missing in action, and they still haven’t found their bodies,” Williams explains.

Such losses are why the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza in Rockville, Maryland, means so much to Williams, according to The Blaze.

And it’s also why he was upset that the plaza’s POW/MIA flag was replaced with an LGBTQ rainbow flag for pride month, the station said.

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Down came the POW-MIA flag, and up went the “Pride flag”

“I wasn’t happy about it at all because the park is supposed to be a veterans park,” Williams told WRC. “People died. Now they took it down and put another flag up.”

He added to the station, “If they want to put the other flag underneath, they could put it underneath, but the POW flag should be flying there.”

It was the first time a rainbow pride flag flew at the Veterans Memorial Plaza, which is outside the Montgomery County executive office building, WRC said.

Montgomery County Council member Evan Glass, the council’s first LGBTQ member, helped celebrate the raising of the pride flag, the station added.

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