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hunter

(39,659 posts)
6. It's mandatory to ignore that kind of nationalism because God doesn't like it.
Mon Oct 23, 2017, 11:49 AM
Oct 2017

I ignored the pledge of allegiance and the national anthem as a kid. My mom was a Jehovah's Witness. Later, after my mom got kicked out of the Witnesses (because she couldn't stay out of politics), we were Quakers. My dad was more comfortable with them.

My mom's family was largely pacifist, which is how they ended up in the U.S. Wild West. They were escaping wars in Europe, and later the U.S. Civil War. My mom's dad refused arms in World War II, but his compromise was to build and repair ships for the Merchant Marine. He wouldn't touch warships.

The only time I felt embarrassed about skipping the pledge was when my fourth grade teacher used me as an impromptu civics lesson about religious freedom in the U.S.A.. She wasn't being mean at all, she was pointing it out as something to be proud of, but I was already a weird kid and her attention only added to my aura of weirdness. But whatever I suffered by ignoring the pledge was nothing compared to the religious persecution my ancestors faced.

I'd remove the pledge of allegiance from school, it's an empty thing, the kind of thing authoritarian nations do. The only tolerable thing about the pledge is that it's not mandatory.

The "Star Spangled Banner" is simply an abomination, both musically and as an anthem.

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