the pilots
The salute is made with the right hand over the heart, the standard civil, not military, flag salute.
Any service members in uniform are expected to stand and salute the flag.
Saluting a flag shows respect to the what the flag represents. Normally, only those in uniform are authorized to salute the flag. Active duty military are required to salute the U.S. flag when appropriate. It is even common to salute a foreign flag when participating in a ceremony. Military, Police, Fireman and various Scouting organizations fit in that category.All others are to place the right hand over their heart during playing of the National Anthem.The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009, S. 3001 included the following Veteran's Salute Provision in Section 595:-Amends Title 36 of the United States Code to allow service members not in uniform to salute the flag during the National Anthem.-FY08 Authorization Bill modified Section 9 of Title 4, US Code, to allow members of the Armed Forces and veterans who are present but not in uniform to render the military salute during hoisting, lowering, or passing of the flag-While the change made to US Code Title 4 allowed our veterans and service members not in uniform to salute the flag when the flag is raised, lowered, or passing in review, it did not allow them to salute the flag during the National Anthem
Girl Scouts salute the flag with their hands on their hearts. They do not use a military salute. Girl Scouts also participate in flag ceremonies.
Any service members in uniform are expected to stand and salute the flag.
Only if you are in military service.
Yes, if You are a serving, or a veteran of the US. Military.
Only military and law enforcement personnel, in uniform, are required to salute.
no, they say the pledge just like everyone else. they salut during the national anthem
The only people who should salute the flag are those in the military who are wearing a uniform. Civilians do NOT salute.
Yes, military personnel in uniform typically salute the flag when indoors. However, there are specific situations and protocols for saluting the flag indoors, such as during ceremonies or when the flag is being presented or lowered. The exact procedures and guidelines may vary based on the branch of the military and specific circumstances.
I have read, but do not know for certain, that the president and all armed forces members do salute Medal of Honor recipients. However, there is no documented requirement for this gesture. We must distinguish between regulation and tradition here. There is no written military regulation that requires a senior officer to ever salute a junior officer or an enlisted man first, regardless of what award the junior holds. However it has been a long standing military tradition to render a salute first (or at least simultaneously) to a Medal of Honor recipient. When doing so, the senior officer is not technically saluting the man, but the award, in the same way that military personnel saluting a color guard are saluting the US flag and not the flag bearer. I hope this clarifies things.