Originally posted by ErikdaRed
And if the words are so harmless and unreligious why is their removal such a point of contention?
Likewise, if the words are so harmless and unreligious, what harm is there in the words remaining?
I, personally, think of "one nation, under God" as being less about religion and more about being one unified nation, with the only thing above us the heavens. ("Heavens" being used here as a generic, not religious, term.) We are not one nation, under government or one nation, under our President or one nation, under any establishment. And, moreover, we are a nation that was founded based on the pursuit of religious beliefs and freedoms. In my (public) school, not only were we told what the pledge meant and where it came from, we were encouraged to speak it less like a sing-songy poem and more like a true pledge. I still do that. We didn't say, "I pledge allegiance / to the flag / of the United States of America / and to the republic / for which it stands" ... etc. It was more like concrete thoughts. "I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. / And to the republic for which it stands." Maybe the fact that we all understood what it meant, even in 2nd and 3rd grade, made a difference. I don't know.
You say you thought the pledge was "stupid on many levels", so I'm thinking that the concept of pledging allegiance at all was something you felt was either old-fashioned or archaic or unnecessary. I will say, though, that the kids I knew who didn't say the Pledge -- for whatever reason -- still stood while it was being said, out of habit perhaps, or out of respect. The same way that people stand for the national anthems of other countries. You may have saved yourself a lot of detention if you'd chosen to simply stand with your classmates and respect the history of the Pledge, even if you didn't agree with the act of saying it.
