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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
The changes then were just a rearrangement of the stars. (You see them in cowboy movies: http://creativeroots.org/wp-content/u...
But what if it completely changed? Would that revoke your pledge to the flag. (I accept that you also pledged allegiance to the republic for which the flag stands. However, the conjunction there is "and". Both must be true for the statement to be true.
Allegiance, in the way that it not only was originally conceived but historically has been used, is the same as unconditional love in this respect. Unconditional love destroys the concept of love altogether, because to love is to value and valuing a virtue and a vice equally defies the law of cause and effect. It raises the vice and destroys the virtue.
If I am to take a pledge, it will be this:
"I swear, by my life and my love of it, that I shall never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine."
That is a promise that I will make. Not to a country, a Country, a republic, a Republic, etc.
When I was a small boy {sorry}, each year the school principal would play a record of this over the PA system, and we would then discuss what we heard and what it meant to us.
It was annoying that so many of my contemporaries failed to listen, failed to comprehend, and failed to participate in the ensuing discussions.
Anyone who equivocates "Flag" with 'government' 'leader', 'ruler' or any specific individual or office, has missed the point. Just as the "Republic" is not the the representatives who have lead the nation astray for their personal gratification, the republic is the process which what is supposed to protect the people from the government.
I've been raised to fury at the weak and selfish men who occupy the offices of the republic, as any man of good faith should be. But my goal is to punish the specific evil-doers, not wipe away the framework that allows men of good conscience and disparate viewpoints to coexist in harmony.
That's why I pledge.
And because I'm a (small 'a') atheist, I simply pause when the two words added are spoken by the rest.
The Pledge of Allegiance was written by Francis Bellamy a Christian socialist. (Nice tribute to him and the Pledge on Huffington Post here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-d....
I think that the current flap over kneeling for the National Anthem is a similar false dichotomy for which an Objectivist would have a different, albeit patriotic, answer.
I'm fairly sure I first saw it in black and white.
That would be a next door neighbor named Kay pointed at our DuMont and told Mom how much nicer those new color TVs are.
https://www.google.com/search?q=dumon...
Bye-bye, DuMont. Don't go away mad. Just go away.
Do we have any elected legislative leaders who believe this?
Skelton's humor was in some ways like that of Danny Thomas and a few others who found an uplifting way to bring laughs, different from sarcasm and put-downs.
"At the time of his death, his art dealer believed that Skelton had earned more money through his paintings than from his television work.
"Skelton believed his life's work was to make people laugh; he wanted to be known as a clown because he defined it as being able to do everything." -- Wikipedia here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Ske...
but much more on the dedicated site here:
http://www.redskelton.com/
So, it is to be expected that he had deep thoughts about patriotism. His beliefs may not be yours or mine, but he was explicitly conceptual in them.