Awesome. Good for him.
I did the something similar as a kid. When I was ten I decided I was Atheist and refused to say the pledge in school. I stood politely but refused to say it.
Awesome. Good for him.
I did the something similar as a kid. When I was ten I decided I was Atheist and refused to say the pledge in school. I stood politely but refused to say it.
I did the same in high school, over items similer at the kid there did.
You know, the pledge did not have "Under God" until the 50's, I think.![]()
Good for himBut I'm a little unsettled that the interviewer labeled the boy's behaviour as juvenile delinquency.
I think he meant that just the particular incident of telling the teacher to "jump off a bridge" was a bit delinquent, not the act of refusing to say the pledge.Good for himBut I'm a little unsettled that the interviewer labeled the boy's behaviour as juvenile delinquency.
A pledge of allegiance is something more befitting an authoritarian regime than a democracy. That school children are forced to recite it is disquieting.
Not exactly. An authoritarian government is one that enacts laws that strictly control the actions of the populace. Any form of government can be authoritarian. However, communist countries do tend to be authoritarian. Nazi Germany was authoritarian, but not communist. Whereas a socialist democracy that allows freedom of speech and religion and such could be considered communist, but wouldn't be authoritarian.A pledge of allegiance is something more befitting an authoritarian regime than a democracy. That school children are forced to recite it is disquieting.
Communism: Isn't that what an authoritarian regime is/was?
Not exactly. An authoritarian government is one that enacts laws that strictly control the actions of the populace. Any form of government can be authoritarian. However, communist countries do tend to be authoritarian. Nazi Germany was authoritarian, but not communist. Whereas a socialist democracy that allows freedom of speech and religion and such could be considered communist, but wouldn't be authoritarian.A pledge of allegiance is something more befitting an authoritarian regime than a democracy. That school children are forced to recite it is disquieting.
Communism: Isn't that what an authoritarian regime is/was?
As for the kid, good for him.
If he was my son I'd explain to him the difference between apples and oranges.
"Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God."
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