Cabwi Desco wrote:The thing you all seem to be missing is that you are just as intolerant as the words to which you object. You are particularly blindingly intolerant of Christians; you can't see past it.
OK, I don't think it's a big deal that the words "under God" are in the pledge or that "in God we trust" is on our currency and coins. Some of you do. We're each entitled to our beliefs. That I don't find the words objectionable doesn't make me a fundi; in fact I'm far from it. I just don't have a really strong feeling about it.
Regardless of what it looks like in print (capitalized "God"), people can mean whatever they believe when they speak the words. If they're atheistic, they can omit the words. The person who describes saying words one doesn't believe or being looked at when omitting them as "torture" is pretty thin-skinned. If you feel strongly that it's wrong to say them, you should be able to stand up proudly for your beliefs, just as adherents to any religion should be able to stand up proudly for theirs.
That said, I agree that the solution to what clearly is a divisive issue would be to restore the pledge to it's original form, omitting any reference to belief systems, instead of going off on pc tangents in some misguided attempt to be "inclusive". There will always be someone, somewhere, who objects to something; there will probably always be someone who objects just for the opportunity to sound off. So let's be realistic: we'll take out the words "under God" and someone will go after the assertion that there's justice for all.
I don't see what you're trying to get at. Intolerant of christians? Hell no. Many of my friends are strong Christians. My issue lies with those aggressive Christians who cannot be wrong in their minds, and force this issue.
By putting 'God' in the pledge, it influences kids to say it. It forces them to say it, else they feel left out. You said yourself that you felt those kids were traitors, Cabwi. People can believe what they want, sure. But nothing else in the pledge I could say is contraversial. The rest is conventional 'This country is dandy' stuff.
What is the issue, is like what you say. To YOU it's not a big deal. To many Christians, it is not a big deal. But to some of other beliefs, it IS a big deal. And they are ignored because a majority refuses to see things their way. Returning the pledge is fine, all you need to do is to keep it related to our secular government. Keep the loyalty gig, sure. Just don't associate the flag with one god. Because nobody else refers to their diety as 'God', save Judeo-christian religions anyway, thus making it quite specific. Even if you can rationalize it as just being a word for any greater entity. Just not saying Under God as a choice is the same as posting the ten commandments in a public school, and telling kids they 'dont have' to look at them.
And about taking out 'Under God' means someone goes after 'Justice For All'... I don't see what you're talking about. Sure, there isn't REALLY complete justice for all, but people in general know that. It's like how the country isn't REALLY indivisable. But ignoring those is quite different than a kid being pressured by the almighty majority on 'Under God'.