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Why Patriots Shouldn't Pledge Allegiance

Posted by freedomforall 1 year, 10 months ago to Philosophy
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Excerpt:
"A Government Loyalty Oath Written by a Socialist
Many who consider the pledge a cornerstone of conservative values will be surprised to learn it was written by a Christian Socialist named Francis Bellamy, who was run out of his pulpit at a Boston church for preaching against capitalism, and who called Jesus Christ a socialist.

His radical cousin, Edward Bellamy, wrote a popular novel, Looking Backward, which glowingly describes a future in which government controls the means of production and where men are conscripted into the country’s “industrial army” and compelled to work in roles assigned to them by central planners.

While working for The Youth’s Companion, a children’s magazine, Bellamy wrote the Pledge of Allegiance in 1892, timed to be introduced in patriotic celebrations accompanying the 400th anniversary of Columbus’s arrival.

According to a summary of Bellamy’s account of his writing of the pledge, he aimed for brevity, as well as “a rhythmic roll of sound so they would impress the children and have a lasting meaning when they became grown-up citizens.”

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Given his beliefs, Bellamy was well-suited for creating a loyalty oath that conditions Americans to subordinate themselves to a powerful central government. Make no mistake—in pledging allegiance “to the republic,” Americans are doing precisely that.

That’s consistent with Bellamy’s wish for state sovereignty and individual liberties to yield to a centralized national government, but it’s starkly at odds with the founding spirit of the country.

Central to that spirit are the notions that government should be a servant and not a master, and that all government should be viewed with deep, ongoing wariness— certainly not the reverence demanded by the Pledge of Allegiance.

Free people have no business pledging loyalty to any government. It’s government that has a duty of loyalty to the people, with no more essential demonstration of that loyalty than the protection of the rights of individuals."


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  • Posted by $ allosaur 1 year, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Well, that's thinking outside the box. Nothing wrong with it for the reasons you give.
    I didn't know where the pledge came from until I read the article and I now realize how it can be turned into a weapon of indoctrination for the wrong people in charge.
    And the wrong people ARE in charge. Corrupt treasonous power hungry people.
    That old saying that "even the devil can quote scripture" springs to mind.
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    Posted by j_IR1776wg 1 year, 10 months ago
    Hear! Hear! I pledge allegiance to the Constitutional Principles of Individual Rights, limited Government, Free Trade...
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  • Posted by mhubb 1 year, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    need to think more on this
    i see where you are coming from

    i always took it as an Oath to the Constitution
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  • Posted by mhubb 1 year, 10 months ago
    politicians and the Members of the Armed Servers Swear an Oath to the Constitution

    look how that has turned out.....
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  • Posted by 1 year, 10 months ago
    "Of the pledge’s 31 words, “indivisible” should give greatest offense to American patriots. The very existence of the United States—created by secession from the British empire—is a testament to political divisibility as a foundational human right.

    The Declaration of Independence explicitly expresses that sentiment:

    “Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed—that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.”

    By reciting the Pledge of Allegiance and proclaiming the United States of America “indivisible,” Americans disclaim their human right of self-determination. They also surrender their ultimate means of holding government accountable: Every government should exist under perpetual threat of disintegration."
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