Posted on 06/02/2006 4:16:41 AM PDT by FerdieMurphy
In order to become citizens we can require anything we want, including balancing a banana on their nose.
There is a major difference between the feeling we had when I was a kid and the feelings I see now. Yes, I used the dread word "feeling" to describe the impact of the Pledge of Allegiance when I was a kid. A real upwelling of patriotic fervor. I don't need it to be diluted by forcing kids to participate. Now, as then, failure to participate ends up having to be explained and that is all that is necessary.
Pledging Allegiance at the point of a (figurative) gun is intimidation.
"A real upwelling of patriotic fervor. I don't need it to be diluted by forcing kids to participate."
I guess we disagree. My patriotism hasn't "evolved" in light of recent insane court decisions that are grounded on personal feelings rather than Constituional law.
And you might feel differently about this when the millions of illegals Bush is trying to import bring their kids with them who consider themselves Mexicans living in America, won't pledge allegiance to our flag, but will remain in our country - a ticking time bomb waiting to explode into another "Reconquista" of the southwest.
If somebody refuses to pledge allegiance to America - they aren't American and they don't belong here.
Um-m. Re-read my post.
Any illegals here can pledge all they want. I want them o-u-t. Period.
And my post did not challenge the right to require a pledge of allegiance, however worded, to the country LEGAL immigrants aspire to become citizens of.
Now that I think about it, the idea of illegals "pledging" wholesale to either my flag or my country makes me sick.
It appears you were wrong.
Countries that do this aren't worth defending and won't be around very long.
Good one, CAP!!!!
The ACLU is a subversive organization that should be condemned by all decent citizens.
Doesn't Israel?
Sort of depends, in my opinion, on whether the combat is on home ground or elsewhere
Actually - there have been a variety of contradictory rulings by states and Federal judges, so some clarification is needed.
I personally believe (and IIRC - a state judge ruled favorably) that a state can mandate that a teacher lead a flag pledge. Also - students have the right to not participate (i.e. - they don't have to recite the pledge), but they can be compelled to stand and show respect - even if they disagree with the pledge.
This is consistent with the fact that kids are mandated to be in the classroom, while the teacher can be compelled to perform the function as a condition of employment. The teacher can go teach elsewhere if the rule bothers them.
I merely mentioned that some judges would give students the ability to be disrespectful to the flag in a classroom, but would go totally bonkers if someone showed the judge that same level of disrespect in the courtroom. Hypocritical to have higher standards for a judge than for the symbol of the country.
I didn't comment on requiring a kid to recite the pledge - and as noted above, I don't have a problem with a kid being allowed to remain silent, but still requiring the kid to stand in silent respect during a ceremony such as reciting the pledge of allegience.
Mike
Why?
Don't'chu know that saggin'is haute couture these days?????
;-)
"Despite my opposition to forcing (see post 26) I stood and recited the pledge proudly and daily when I was in school."
So did I, I just didn't know what I was doing.
You can't compare adults standing for a judge in a courtroom and kids being forced to recite a pledge before school. 2 different things.
If memory serves, what we know as the Pledge, sans the "under God", was penned by a socialist.
SO WHAT!
Did you ever read it? Does it sound "Socialist" to you?
The author didn't want the country to think like "I'm an Illinoian," "I'm a Floridian," "I'm a Kentuckian" etc. Too much independence in those pesky states. No, in order to socialist-ize a country, you first have to get it to think as one. Consider how often, during the heyday of the USSR, you heard in the news about Mr. X from Belorussia and Mr. Y from the Ukraine etc. No, it was Mr. X and Mr. Y from the USSR.
You're absolutely right.
The Pledge of Allegiance is a socialist instrument and people should be pledging allegiance to their states instead of a centralized, imperial Federal government.
They should allow people to not stand for the pledge.
If you're a kid, remember those kids who don't stand when you go to the lunch room, or to the play ground, and after school.
If you're an adult, remember those adults and/or their children who don't stand when you do business or socialize.
And remember this judge, and whoever appointed him next time you vote.
This judge, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Ryskamp, needs to be impeached. Where in the US Constitution does it say you cannot require the pledge to be recited by those we are educating?
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