TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — As demonstrations against police brutality roiled the country earlier this year, Antoine Mickle began noticing the flags going up in his Jacksonville neighborhood declaring "Blue Lives Matter."
For months, those flags hung from his neighbors' homes.
But when Mickle decided to hang a flag of his own last month — proclaiming that "Black Lives Matter" — his neighborhood association immediately asked him to take it down, calling the flag "noxious or offensive" under its rules.
If his neighbors could express their support for police, he said, he should be allowed to make a statement of his own.
"My life means something. My life matters. I'm a black man living in a white neighborhood," Mickle said Wednesday, a day after he filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Jacksonville asserting his civil rights were violated.
The country's racial divisions aren't just flaring up in city streets, government plazas and political discourse. They are also outside our front doors as disputes arise in some neighborhoods over waving the flag of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Homeowners associations can wield wide power over their communities — from preserving the architectural character of their neighborhoods to dictating paint colors and garden choices. Homeowners associations in Phoenix and Houston ordered residents to take down their flags.
But Mickle, who is Black, asserts that the association went too far when it went after his flag. He has no intention of taking it down.