Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Texas Loses It's Collective Mind

I must assume that rednecks have some sort of innate desire to commit themselves to causes, no matter how ridiculous those causes might be. Religion is one such cause - Baptists, Catholics, and all of the major religions have some sort of 'statement of belief" or creed which they must recite at least once a week while in the presence of their peers. It is not enough that the commitment be made privately, within one's own thoughts - it must be made in public - to declare one's devotion to that cause so that the crowd knows you are truly one of them.

I have always been a very proud American, but I am annoyed, and have been since I was a young man, at having to publicly recite the pledge of allegiance (or sing the national anthem, in the case of sporting events) to the flag at every public meeting I attend. What, I can't be a true American without making some public declaration of my undying devotion to a man-made geopolitical entity every time we gather together? This really gets very, very stupid, in my not-so-humble opinion.

Well, now there's another one - a pledge for the citizens of Texas that also commits them to loving their smaller geopolitical entity as well as their imaginary ghost-in-the-sky person. Coming next week - pledges for your town, county, neighborhood and family unit. You'll be so much better a person for publicly declaring your devotion.

HOUSTON, Sept. 23 (UPI) -- Texas created its first state pledge in 1933, made the pledge mandatory for schools 70 years later, and now legislators have made it religious.

...

The Chronicle said that Harris County Republican legislators Sen. Dan Patrick and Rep. Debbie Riddle helped pass a law that brought religion into the mix, simply by inserting "one state under God" into the virtually unknown pledge.



From United Press International

2 comments:

Unknown said...

You totally forgot about pledging allegiance to our blogs! Like Duh!

I will also have you know that I pledge allegiance daily to my PDA ;)

I'm with you, publicly declaring your allegiance to any state or religion is ludicrous. It does not make me any less a member of the (name organization) community if I don't laud my devotion to the "group".

It seems to me that many of us grown-ups should know by now that it is far too easy for liars, cheats, and frauds to declare allegience for something, in order to manipulate others while declaring those who refuse to broadcast(?) their beliefs and allegiances as "sinners" (all the while being ripped off by those who declare that they are truly doing what's best for the community...and so on).

And this is coming from Texas...on that note, consider me underwhelmed (which is sad that this stupidity is not unexpected from the "home" of our pResident).

Bozo Funny said...

Well said, Dizzy. We're of a like mind on this issue.