New Zealand Flag Institute

The New Zealand Flag Institute was established in 2005 amidst a campaign by the NZ Flag.com Trust for a referendum to change the New Zealand flag. The campaign to bring about a citizens initiated referendum on the subject subsequently failed.

History

The organisation was founded by Aucklander John Cox (1965-2017), a New Zealand vexillolographer and lawyer.[1]

The flag has stood the test of time. A country that abandons its old symbols for no better reason than to follow changing fashions has lost its heart and neglected its heritage.

John Cox, head of the New Zealand Flag Institute.[2]

Aims

The Institute's primary aim is to educate New Zealanders about the history and symbolism of the New Zealand Flag. The Institute also aims to encourage people to understand and appreciate what the flag stands for. It also encourages New Zealanders to fly the flag whenever and wherever possible.

gollark: Also, I had an idea lately: a points system for osmarks.tk! You could earn points by completing actions like visiting 100 pages, clicking a random button, initiating protocol gamma, or possibly making a comment.
gollark: Anarchocapitalism: what could possibly go wrong?
gollark: free markets goodmonopolies badregulatory capture badcentralized communism extremely bad
gollark: Nonsense. People could just substitute in blue/green pencils.
gollark: Perhaps! The general idea is that we can *test* communism without necessarily dooming everyone if it breaks.

See also

References

  1. "Blomkamp Cox: Who We Are". Blomkamp Cox. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. Paul Chapman (28 January 2005). "Campaigners want British link removed from New Zealand flag". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2008-03-19.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.