A state
lawmaker filed a resolution this week urging people to think before they text
and stop using an emoji of the Chilean flag, which resembles the Lone Star
State flag, as a symbol of Texas pride.
State Representative Tom Oliverson described the resolution
as a light-hearted but serious civics lesson for the social media age. More
than a few people have garnished their tweets and text messages about Texas
with a Chilean flag, he said.
“I designed it be educational, kind of like a public service
announcement,” Oliverson, a Republican, told media.
His resolution does not carry the force of law.
It calls on lawmakers: “to reject the notion that the
Chilean flag, although it is a nice flag, can in any way compare to or be
substituted for the official state flag of Texas and urge all Texans not to use
the Republic of Chile flag emoji in digital forums when referring to the Lone
Star Flag of the great State of Texas.”
The Chilean flag is available on the standard set of emojis
while the Texas flag is not.
Both flags have a single white star on a blue field on the
left with a horizontal white stripe on top of a red stripe. On the Texas flag,
the blue goes from top to bottom while on the Chilean flag, the red horizontal
stripe stretches across the bottom.
The resolution generated statewide news on Friday with many
offering their views on Twitter.
“For Pete’s sake, let the #txlege freshman pass his adorable
little flag emoji bill,” political analyst Harold Cook tweeted.
Oliverson said the message to prevent flag confusion had
been received.
“Even if the legislature decides not to hear it, we have
achieved our objective,” he said.
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