Under God
Let's keep God in America and lose the Pledge of Allegiance. Why should we get rid of the Pledge of Allegiance?
1. None of the Founding Fathers wrote the Pledge of Allegiance. The original Pledge of Allegiance was written in the early 1890's by a Yankee socialist defrocked preacher for the "benefit" of Southern school children.
2. We shouldn't pledge allegiance to a rectangular piece of fabric. We should pledge allegiance to God and merely salute the flag of a constitutional republic (assuming we had the flag of a constitutional republic to salute).
3. The United States, unfortunately, is not a true "republic" any longer. We lost that when the Union forced the Southern States to remain part of that which became the U.S. empire.
4. Union is good in a constitutional republic, but the United States should not be "indivisible" at the point of a bayonet.
5. While ideal, "with liberty and justice for all" is fiction in the United States today.
Yes, it's still "the best country in the world," but that's like saying that this snake is less poisonous than that snake. I don't like getting bitten by any of them. When we've lost the little that remains of true America, we won't be "the best country in the world" any longer; we'll be just another dictatorship. "Under God" is the only part from the Pledge of Allegiance that we should keep. Though most Americans would disagree with me about getting rid of the Pledge of Allegiance, that's my opinion. I wonder how the Founding Fathers would feel about it, considering that they preferred liberty over tyranny.
1. None of the Founding Fathers wrote the Pledge of Allegiance. The original Pledge of Allegiance was written in the early 1890's by a Yankee socialist defrocked preacher for the "benefit" of Southern school children.
2. We shouldn't pledge allegiance to a rectangular piece of fabric. We should pledge allegiance to God and merely salute the flag of a constitutional republic (assuming we had the flag of a constitutional republic to salute).
3. The United States, unfortunately, is not a true "republic" any longer. We lost that when the Union forced the Southern States to remain part of that which became the U.S. empire.
4. Union is good in a constitutional republic, but the United States should not be "indivisible" at the point of a bayonet.
5. While ideal, "with liberty and justice for all" is fiction in the United States today.
Yes, it's still "the best country in the world," but that's like saying that this snake is less poisonous than that snake. I don't like getting bitten by any of them. When we've lost the little that remains of true America, we won't be "the best country in the world" any longer; we'll be just another dictatorship. "Under God" is the only part from the Pledge of Allegiance that we should keep. Though most Americans would disagree with me about getting rid of the Pledge of Allegiance, that's my opinion. I wonder how the Founding Fathers would feel about it, considering that they preferred liberty over tyranny.
Labels: Constitution, freedom, history, political correctness, politics
5 Comments:
Yes I can say I am so glad to have found you...seems as we think alike and i truly appreciate this blog and all it has to say....your stating the truth.....would love to share this with others.....thank you for posting and sharing
most sincerly,
Dawn
This is very good and logical. Do you mind if I reprint this on the Swamp Fox Files?
Ray Perdue
opendoornews@gmail.com
http://swampfoxfiles.blogspot.com
Yes sir, feel free to repost on your blog. I borrowed it from someone else too...I've seen it go around email a few times and liked it more each time I saw it.
That is the first time I have seen it. Thanks.
Yours is an interesting post. Here are other articles on the same topic that your readers will enjoy
http://rexcurry.net/pledgesoutherners.html
http://rexcurry.net/pledgesouthracism.html
These are audio from Dixie Broadcasting http://rexcurry.net/rexcurry9c2-dixiebroadcasting.mp3
Dixie Broadcasting http://rexcurry.net/rexcurry9c1-dixiebroadcasting.mp3
The Pledge of Allegiance was the origin of the stiff-armed salute adopted later by the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazis). For more information visit RexCurry.net, the site that archives the discoveries of the noted historian Dr. Rex Curry, author of the book "Pledge of Allegiance Secrets."
http://rexcurry.net/i-pledge-allegiance-to-the-flag2.jpg
A new documentary video movie exposes the shocking facts on youtube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BssWWZ3XEe4
and here http://rexcurry.net/pledge-of-allegiance-rexcurrydotnet.wmv
and on google video
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5557748653154009373&hl=en
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4377628546479871943
The original Pledge began with a military salute that was then extended out toward the flag. In practice the second gesture was performed palm down. Thus, the Nazi salute is actually the "American salute" and evolved from the military salute extended.
http://rexcurry.net/pledge-allegiance-pledge-allegiance.jpg
The Pledge was written in 1892 by Francis Bellamy. Francis was cousin to Edward Bellamy, author of an international bestseller in 1888 that launched the nationalism movement. Edward's book was translated into every major language, including German. Francis and Edward were both self-proclaimed socialists in the Nationalism movement and they promoted military socialism.
http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-pledge.html
The Bellamys wanted government to take over all schools. When the government granted their wish, the government's schools imposed segregation by law and taught racism as official policy. Government schools also forced robotic chanting to flags. All of that behavior even outlasted German National Socialism (or Nazism, although German National Socialists did not call themselves Nazis, they called themselves Socialists and National Socialists).
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