The State Said No Pride Flags. So The City Found A Way To Keep The Colors Anyway

Sometimes rules are written to be clear, strict, and impossible to get around. And sometimes, they accidentally inspire exactly the kind of creativity they were meant to prevent.

That’s what happened when lawmakers in Idaho passed a law aimed at stopping cities from flying non-approved flags, a move widely understood as targeting Pride flags in particular.

The rule itself sounded simple on paper. Cities could only display a limited set of flags: the U.S. flag, the state flag, official city flags, and POW flags.

No exceptions. No loopholes.

The State Said No Pride Flags. So the City Found a Way to Keep the Colors Anyway
Not the actual photo

At least, that was the idea.

'State said no cities can fly non-approved flags?'

The Idaho state legislature has been very angry at Boise city hall because Boise city hall was flying a Pride flag.

They tried making a law before, but Boise found a loophole. So they passed an iron clad law stating no city could fly anything other than the US,

state, official city, and POW flags. So Boise took down the Pride flag and wrapped all their flag poles with the colors of the Pride flag. 🏳️‍🌈 🏳️‍⚧️

A Law Designed to Close Loopholes

This wasn’t the first attempt.

Earlier efforts had already run into problems when Boise continued flying Pride flags by finding ways around the wording. So lawmakers came back with something more rigid, more specific, something they believed would finally shut it down completely.

And for a moment, it seemed like it worked.

The Pride flag came down.

From a distance, it looked like compliance.

Following the Rule, Just Not the Way You Expected

But then something interesting happened.

Instead of removing the message, the city changed the medium.

If they couldn’t fly a Pride flag, they could still use color. They could still use design. They could still express the same idea without technically breaking the rule.

So the flagpoles themselves were wrapped in Pride colors.

No separate flag. No violation of the wording.

Just a different way of saying the same thing.

It was simple. Legal. And very hard to argue against without rewriting the law again.

See also  Woman Carrying Her BIL’s Baby Refuses Unmedicated Water Birth, Now Everyone’s Furious

When Restrictions Spark Creativity

This kind of response isn’t new, but it’s always fascinating to watch in real time.

When rules become too rigid, people don’t always push back directly. Instead, they look for the edges. The places where intention and wording don’t quite match.

In this case, the law focused on what could be flown, not what could be displayed in other ways. That left space, small, but enough.

Urban governance discussions, including those often referenced by the National League of Cities, frequently highlight how local governments adapt to state-level restrictions through symbolic or structural alternatives. When direct expression is limited, indirect expression tends to grow.

That’s exactly what this looks like.

Not Just One City

People were quick to point out that this isn’t happening in isolation.

In Salt Lake City, officials responded to similar restrictions by incorporating a rainbow element directly into the official city flag. If only certain flags are allowed, then one solution is to redefine what counts as an official flag.

It’s not defiance in the traditional sense.

It’s adaptation.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Some people saw it as a clever workaround, the kind of solution that follows the rules exactly while still making a point.

gard3nwitch − IIRC, Utah did the same thing, so Salt Lake City added a rainbow to their official city flag.

AbruptMango − Ahh, the party of freedom.

Marine__0311 − That's hilarious. That law would never hold up in court. I hope they're challenging it.

Others focused on the broader tension, questioning why something like flag design had become such a contested issue in the first place.

Tinker107 − The Party of Get Big Gubmint Outta Are Lives wishes to control the colors and patterns on the piece of cloth you hoist in front of your building.

wintervamp753 − Does it count as a loophole if the legislature just forgot to include any kind of enforcement mechanism because they are incompetent morons?

The first round, Boise just straight up broke the law because there's nothing that could have been done to punish them for it.

Instead of addressing anything that actually would help their constituents, our dear reps made sure to address the oversight as soon as possible;

now that the legislature "fixed" the lack of enforcement, Boise complied and took down the flag . ..

But wrapped the flag poles, put a giant sign on the front of the building, and their lights are being done in pride color patterns.

No pride flag in sight though, so no law is being broken!

HRHSuzz − I refer to this as “freedom, but my way, dammit or else“

A few responses highlighted the irony. Rules framed around limiting expression ended up generating even more visible forms of it.

DarthGayAgenda − I love how these are the people that say liberals need a safe space and love echo chambers.

randamnthoughts2 − This makes me smile. The article I read said they also put up rainbow lights and a rainbow flag in the window saying

"Creating a city for everyone" with the pride colors, trans flag colors, and colors for POC

Infini-Bus − I visited Boise once, it was a cute town. Somehow they had a gay dance club open on a weeknight during the pandemic.

Met a chill older guy there who told me about his life in that "island of blue in a sea of red"

That This Really Says

At its core, this situation isn’t just about flags.

See also  Woman Cooks Husband’s Favorite Meal, He Leaves To Eat At His Mom’s Instead

It’s about how authority and expression interact.

When a rule is written to be absolute, it often assumes that compliance will be straightforward. But real life doesn’t always work that way. People don’t just follow rules. They interpret them. They test them. They adapt around them.

And sometimes, the result is something even more visible than what came before.

Final Thoughts

The Pride flag may have come down.

But the message didn’t disappear.

It shifted. It changed form. It found a new way to exist within the boundaries that were supposed to contain it.

And in doing so, it raised a simple but powerful question.

What happens when the letter of the law is followed perfectly, but the spirit of it isn’t?

 

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved