I grew up in a country that was free. Where men in far away places fought so that I wouldn't have to. So that I could live a good, happy life free of tyranny. As a man I see it was all a lie. The heroes of my youth went off to war, fighting for American "Interests" abroad. Many have died throughout the history of the United States, but it has been so long since we actually fought to defend ourselves, for any realistic definition of the word justice. Even World War II, we engaged in the European front after being dragged into a confrontation in the Pacific. At every turn, The United States as chosen to escalate violence. This is not the banner of a free society, this is the banner of the war machine.
As I sit here I listen to men lamenting the loss of the Pledge in schools. Veterans who were duped by their country into believing they were protecting their families at home by killing people abroad; I can only think of Francis Bellamy, a Christian socialist who wrote the original pledge in 1892. A national pledge is, by its very nature, a collectivist/socialist gesture. From Wikipedia:
In 1940 the Supreme Court, in Minersville School District v. Gobitis, ruled that students in public schools, including the respondents in that case, Jehovah's Witnesses who considered the flag salute to be idolatry, could be compelled to swear the Pledge. A rash of mob violence and intimidation against Jehovah's Witnesses followed the ruling. In 1943 the Supreme Court reversed its decision, ruling in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette that public school students are not required to say the Pledge, concluding that "compulsory unification of opinion" violates the First Amendment. In a later opinion, the Court held that students are also not required to stand for the Pledge.
Our government has even legally recognized the nature of a pledge in a free society, yet the masses continue to bicker over it. How ironic that the American ideal of individuality, accountability, and keeping the fruit of ones own labor could be symbolically destroyed with a fifteen second pledge.
I am a free man. I pledge allegiance to myself and to my family. I am owned by no arbitrary political border. I will conduct voluntary transactions with any, act morally following the non-aggression principal. I will exist as a true patriot, to raise my voice and shout in dissent to tyranny so that myself and my fellow man may live unobstructed for a time. The State will claim our lives until you relinquish your permission.
I feel terrible about having said the pledge of allegiance as a child, not because I hate America, but because it was a pledge I could not understand the importance of as a less than rational child. As a Mennonite I usually adhere to the general prohibitions against taking oaths and pledges; essentially my rights, like the Jehovah's witnesses, were subverted by social pressure and indoctrination.
ReplyDeleteThere is a greater question, too: what is the point of a pledge? If we seek to act morally in all things a pledge can restrict that moral action. You are asked to put loyalty to the state ahead of morality. If morality and loyalty were indistinguishable then a pledge would be totally unnecessary.