‘The flag flies for all.’ Facing threats, Canada sees renewed sense of pride in flag
FREDERICTON — Graydon Miles was driving down Highway 7 in Ontario last year when he saw an upside down Maple Leaf flying from a pickup truck, along with one flag directing an obscenity at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and another supporting Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential bid.
For Miles, a high school teacher who lives in Ottawa, the truck brought back memories of the “Freedom Convoy” that took over the city in 2022. The noisy protest attracted thousands of demonstrators to Parliament Hill fighting against public-health restrictions, COVID-19 vaccine mandates and the federal government, and Canadian flags were omnipresent among the protesters.
“I’ve always been a proud Canadian and felt that our flag represented a way for others around the world to tie us — as peacekeepers, Olympians and backpackers — to the values we were most known for,” Miles said in an interview Wednesday. “For me, these traits included civility and humility, kindness and compassion, and being distinctly non-American.”
The convoy left him angry that the flag “suddenly seemed to represent, both at home and on the world stage, the exact opposite of what I always thought it meant.”


