For supporters who put down $100 deposits and waited through delay after delay, the T1’s arrival was supposed to feel like vindication. Instead, that rear-panel flag with just 11 stripes turned into a viral Rorschach test. To some, it was a careless design oversight. To others, it hinted at something deeper: a gap between the loud promise of “MADE in America” and the quieter, revised language about being merely “designed with American values in mind.”
As experts compared the T1 to an HTC model assembled in Taiwan, the symbolism grew heavier than the hardware itself. The missing stripes became a shorthand for modern political branding: big rhetoric, fuzzy details. Yet preorder shipments are still rolling out, and plenty of buyers say they don’t care where every component comes from. In the end, the T1 may work just fine as a phone. As a patriotic icon, though, it’s already dropped the call.
