• @RebekahWSD
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    43 hours ago

    Yeah, I didn’t say it and didn’t stand for it cause I hated doing both those things.

    They told my mother, thinking she’d rip into me since she was part of the school system (not a teacher) but instead she fucking ripped into them because she knew the law and was pissed they tried to force me.

    I continued to sit down after that.

    I did put my hand over my heart so teacher would be mildly less pissed. It didn’t help lmfao.

    • ✺roguetrick✺
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      3 hours ago

      I only ever had one teacher get absolutely pissed. Nobody else cared. This was directly after 9/11 mind, so the bootlickers felt justified. His rage turned quite impotent on front of the administration.

      Edit: I think they didn’t care because they knew I had little concern for just about anything they may say or do. I rarely even attended class, lol.

      • @RebekahWSD
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        23 hours ago

        This was before 9/11. By then, we were too old for pledge. She was mostly pissed my mother tore into her I think!

  • @[email protected]
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    13413 hours ago

    It’s so wild to me that the US still has this fascist ahh ritual. Nobody told them that the godless Soviet Union fell already?

    • @slaacaa
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      3611 hours ago

      Literal brainwashing. It could be in a distopian movie

    • @captainlezbian
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      9 hours ago

      It’s ok the pledge was written by a communist, but a home grown American communist

      • ZeroOne
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        33 hours ago

        Ohhhhh nooooo it’s always the “everything bad in America is because of communism” gag

        • @captainlezbian
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          42 hours ago

          What no this is more of a “American communism is a longstanding tradition and it’s foolishness to brush us off as purely a capitalistic nation.”

          • ZeroOne
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            11 hour ago

            Ok now I get it, apologies

  • DreamButt
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    2110 hours ago

    So as a kid I always felt weird about the pledge of allegiance and even got sent to the principal’s office a couple time for it. Eventually I just started faking the words to get out of trouble…

    Needless to say I’m a leftist as an adult lol

    • @LANIK2000
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      108 hours ago

      I was absolutely horrified when I learned that’s a normal thing in the states. All our lives we’re taught about the nazis and communists doing stuff like this and then my American friend just casually confirms they this.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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      12 hours ago

      So tame tho. See my other comment…

      We had not only national anthems, but a whole-ass flag raising ceremony weekly. And there’s even a “Little Red Scarf” ceremony once a year.

      When I first came to the US, I just thought the pledge was a normal thing. But according to some Europeans on the internet, its apparantly just… not a thing in their country?

      • @slickgoat
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        3812 hours ago

        Not only is not a thing, but the rest of the world views it as distinctly odd. Performative patriotism looks a bit creepy from the outside. I guess you have to be born into it, but we all know that family who does something and remains unaware just how it looks?

        • nfh
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          46 hours ago

          Even being born into it, it feels weird. I’ll stand politely when the national anthem is played at a sporting event, because that feels only slightly odd. But the pledge of allegiance always gave me straight cult vibes, no thanks.

          I’ve seen multiple groups of Australians treat their national anthem with mild irreverence, which feels so much healthier.

          • @slickgoat
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            33 hours ago

            As an Australian I can confirm this. Anybody silly enough to act patriotic in any group will be sledged mercilessly.

      • @HowManyNimons
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        1211 hours ago

        It’s completely not a thing in any country I’ve visited except America. You guys are the gold ribbon looniest.

        • @[email protected]
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          48 hours ago

          You guys are the gold ribbon looniest.

          Aw, shucks. Thanks!

          I realize it’s not a compliment, but we need a win, right now, so we will take it.

        • @[email protected]
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          610 hours ago

          That’s the nicest thing I’ve agreed with being said about my country in over a month. Thank you, kind stranger!

  • NaibofTabr
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    12 hours ago

    If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.

    […]

    Those who begin coercive elimination of dissent soon find themselves exterminating dissenters. Compulsory unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity of the graveyard.

    Justice Robert H. Jackson, West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette

    While it’s true that this ritual is commonly practiced in the US, it is also true that everyone has the protected right to not participate, which has been upheld in court (Frazier v. Alexandre).

    Personally, I feel that choosing to exercise your civil rights is a highly patriotic act.

    • @[email protected]
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      109 hours ago

      I’d say you guys value patriotism too much. Typical of an empire too.

      Btw, it’s what gave rise to the Nazis (among others).

      • ZeroOne
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        13 hours ago

        Try Nationalism/Jingoism; Patriots actually stand up to their own country’s BS

      • BigAssFan
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        18 hours ago

        Patriotism is borderline discrimination.

    • kersploosh
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      2312 hours ago

      One of my favorite truisms: One thing the flag stands for is you don’t have to stand for the flag.

      • @Tattorack
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        1311 hours ago

        A certain part of your population seems to have forgotten that.

        • Lem Jukes
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          611 hours ago

          Most people are actually pretty stupid when you think about it. Myself included.

    • DreamButt
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      710 hours ago

      Right except most kids and teachers don’t know about that so the kid still gets forced to do it

      • @AeonFelis
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        48 hours ago

        Even if they knew - the hurdle is too high for a kid to go through. And even if they did - they’ll probably face retribution from the school for dragging them to court.

    • @captainlezbian
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      49 hours ago

      Yeah i didn’t partake starting when as a teenager I saw Germans on thr internet expressing concern about it. Nobody said anything it was my right as an American not to pledge my allegiance to America.

    • @[email protected]
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      27 hours ago

      I was 8 when I moved to the US. It was bizarre. Obviously, as an outsider, I felt I had to fit in. I never questioned it. I didn’t understand it. I just said the words.
      I guess at some point you understand the words (I left the US before then), but by that point it’s probably become a habit. It’s still the thing that everyone else in the class does. And you still want to fit in.
      Never mind understanding the politics of the US that you have the right to not do something that is habitual and seems completely normal.

  • @bandwidthcrisis
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    610 hours ago

    I was going to comment that it seems strange to me, then I remembered that I had to sing hymns and say prayers at school, back in the 70s.

    I think we had one child who was allowed to skip the religious stuff back then, but the population is more diverse now (and atheism is growing), so I wonder how things have changed.

  • @RememberTheApollo_
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    39 hours ago

    ‘Tis the season for school concerts and the like. Went to two, and the had the parents stand up and say the pledge before the concert. WTF. I have to swear in a gain before we can see kids play instruments badly? The pledge is pretty ridiculous on the surface, but turning it into a ritual is positively cultish.

  • datendefekt
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    711 hours ago

    I grew up in the States but never was a citizen. In second grade after a while of this silly ceremony I asked the teacher if I really had to participate, because it didn’t really apply to me. And the teacher was totally cool with it!

    It was even wierder afterwards, being the only one sitting and watching everyone.

  • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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    12 hours ago

    Lol, the US seems tame by comparison.

    I remember in China in like first or second grade, we had a whole ceremony in the school yard where they put on the little red scarf thingy on the kids (Google it: “China Little Red Scarf” and see what I meant; edit: I google it and found this wiki article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Pioneers_of_China), after singing the natioal anthem and watching the kids do the the whole flag raising ritual. Idk what the f was even happening at the time, but restrospectively, that felt like joining the Jonestown Cult.

    (While that “little red scarf” ceremony was a one time thing, the flag raising ceremony was more frequent. I don’t remember exact how frequent, but I’m gonna guess like maybe every monday. Cuz I remember sneaking out before they had us go to the school yard, and I just kinda just chill at some “vantage point” where I can see the kids in the school yard, while I just chilled, outside of the sun. I mean, I probably just didn’t feel like being in the school yard and being in the sun, cuz its feels like being cooked alive in the heat.)

    • @[email protected]
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      1611 hours ago

      That uh, does seem more tame than the US.

      The pledge was every single morning, in my experience AFTER the national anthem and a moment of silence. We had to stand for the whole thing. (And in Texas, also have to do a Texas pledge)

      Then if course we had our insanely biased teaching of history, minimizing our genocide and slavery. Forcing us to learn about important founders to a degree that they become sort of semi-god figures.

      • @[email protected]
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        411 hours ago

        That’s very strange. In the schools I’ve been to it was just the pledge, and you don’t have to stand. They aren’t legally allowed to force you to stand or say it, but some schools do anyway.

        • @[email protected]
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          58 hours ago

          That’s part of the problem of states handling everything so differently. In New York, I had the pledge every morning, that’s pretty much national, but nothing else almost ever outside of sports (national anthem). Not only did they know you didn’t have to stand, they taught us that in history class.

          How can you come together “as a nation” when your education from state to state can be completely different.