Oh, shut up
/Left-wing local leader torched after griping about American flags, pushing ‘more relatable’ replacement
Isabel Mata said the park's 27 American flags represent parts of history that 'frankly, are not great'
A Washington [state] city councilwoman said she would rather fly a pride flag than the American flag while questioning why a local park displays 27 versions of the U.S. flag, some of which she said represent parts of American history that are "not great."
"To me, a pride flag is way more relatable than an American flag. I would not raise an American flag at my house because I wouldn’t. I wasn’t even born here [yes she was, but what’s cooler these days than being an immigrant? *] But I would raise a pride flag," said Lynnwood council member Isabel Mata on Monday. "As the most diverse city in all of Snohomish County, I don’t think that I’m the only one."
Mata, who identifies as a "queer, neurodivergent writer, advocate, and mindfulness meditation teacher" in her government biography, suggested replacing the flags with commemorative ones in an effort to be more inclusive—while downplaying the symbolism of the American flag.
…. At the heart of the argument is Wilcox Park, known as "Flag Park," which features 27 flagpoles displaying various versions of the American flag.
"This community is filled with so many beautiful cultures and diverse backgrounds and all of these things, yet we have 27 iterations of the same flag, some representing parts of American history that, frankly, are not great," said Mata.
Fortunately, help is on the way for poor Isabel, brought to her by a worthless old man desperate to gain the approval of the new Democrat Party:
Schumer pushes bill to give Pride flag same status as US, military flags
*Grok:
Isabel Mata was born in the United States—specifically, she hails from Rochester, New York (born June 3, 1996).
She was raised between Rochester, NY, and Nashville, Tennessee (as a child of divorce, one of seven siblings), attended Brighton High School (in the Rochester area), and graduated from New York University (NYU) in 2018.
Her official city bio, campaign materials, and news profiles (e.g., Lynnwood Times) confirm she is originally from Rochester, NY. She later lived in Los Angeles, moved back to the Puget Sound area (family in Kirkland), and settled in Lynnwood in 2022.
Her comment "I wasn't even born here" (made during the May 2026 city council discussion about flags in what’s known as U.S. Flag Park / Wilcox Park) referred to not being born in Lynnwood or Washington state—not the United States. In short, she is a native-born American from upstate New York, and the phrasing in her complaint was about local origins rather than national ones.
She wouldn’t “raise an American flag at her house” because she wasn’t born in Lynnwood? I call bullshit; she meant what she said.
I put the question to Grok, after it first gave me the party line printed above.
Q: She wouldn't raise an American flag at her own house because she wasn't born in Lynnwood? Does that even pretend to make sense, or was she backtracking after being excoriated by her fellow Americans?
A: No, it doesn't make much sense as a coherent justification, and yes, she issued a clarification/apology after significant backlash.
The Original Comments (May 4, 2026 Council Meeting)During a discussion about flag policies at Wilcox Park (aka U.S. Flag Park, with 27 historical versions of the American flag), Isabel Mata said:
“To me, a pride flag is way more relatable than an American flag. I would not raise an American flag at my house because I wouldn’t… I wasn’t even born here. But I would raise a pride flag.”
She also critiqued the flags as representing parts of American history that “frankly, are not great” and suggested the park could feature more diverse flags to better reflect Lynnwood’s diversity.
The phrasing “I wasn’t even born here” was widely interpreted (and reported) as referring to not being born in the United States, especially since she later described herself in her response as an “immigrant” drawn by the country’s promise. However, her official bios consistently describe her as born June 3, 1996, in the U.S. (Rochester, New York area), raised between NY and Tennessee, NYU grad, etc. The “here” was likely meant locally (Lynnwood/Washington), but the delivery tied it directly to her reluctance to fly the U.S. flag.
Does the Logic Hold Up?
No. Being born (or not) in a specific city doesn’t logically explain refusing the national flag at one’s private home. Millions of naturalized citizens, immigrants, and people born elsewhere in the U.S. fly the American flag without issue. The comment came across as using personal identity/relatability (as a queer woman) and local non-nativity to dismiss a core national symbol—especially tone-deaf in a dedicated flag park honoring U.S. history, right before Memorial Day.
Critics (including veterans, residents, and commentators) saw it as unpatriotic for an elected official who swore an oath to the U.S. Constitution. It fueled accusations of failing to assimilate or appreciate the country that allows her to serve in office.
In short, the initial statement revealed a strong personal preference for identity-based symbols over the national one, framed around her background. The follow-up softened the tone and tried to reframe it as inclusive dialogue rather than rejection. Whether that counts as genuine reflection or damage control is up to interpretation, but the backlash clearly prompted the response. Public meetings (e.g., May 11) saw residents pushing back.