Allegiance:
1 a : the obligation of a feudal vassal to his liege lord b (1) : the fidelity owed by a subject or citizen to a sovereign or government (2) : the obligation of an alien to the government under which the alien resides
2 : devotion or loyalty to a person, group, or cause
I almost think this should be a general question, since we all do it, and it should not be a matter of opinion, but rather a rigorously defined item.
To pledge your fidelity, devotion, and loyalty to the United states means…
I will do whatever my country’s leaders tell me to do? No.
I will support my country’s leaders in whatever they decide to do? No.
I will support and agree with the majority consensus of my fellow citizens? No.
I will favor the United states over other country’s when their is conflict between country’s? still no…
I will fufill my duties as a citizen by paying taxes, observing laws, respecting judicial opinions, and voting. Hardly.
all I can come up with that it definately means:
I will live here.
I will participate in my duties as citizen at least so far as saying this meaningless pledge, but no further.
I will chant “USA! USA! USA!” during the olympics.
Any other input?? Is their an official interpretation of what saying this pledge means and obligates a citizen to?
I don’t think the Pledge of Allegiance means much of anything, and I’m pretty sure that legally it doesn’t mean much of anything. However, in the oath taken by naturalized citizens under 8 U.S.C. 1448 “true faith and allegiance” to the United States does pretty much mean fulfilling one’s duties as a citizen (including military service).
sorry, i should not have said we all do it. This message board is certainly not exclusively US citizens. Moreover, I am a us citizen, and I don’t say it either, since I don’t believe in saying something when I have no clear understanding of what i am saying.
IIRC the pledge was made up during one of the great imigration waves (late 1800s). People from an earlier wave where uncertain of the loyalty of the new imigrants and thought the pledge would help somehow. Kind of funny, since many historians think that the “founding fathers” would have rejected such a pledge without including wording protecting individual liberty. Something like “I pledge allegiance as long as the government isn’t too corrupt, and I also pledge to hang onto these weapons, so watch your butt and keep your nose out of my business.”
When you think about it, it does seem odd to pledge allegiance to the flag as opposed to the nation. My opinion is based, I’m sure, on my peacenik hippy father getting all disgusted at a song I used to sing in elementary school that had a line “oh flag you take care of us and we’ll take care of you”. He was all up in arms about how fabric could take care of people. This was in the late 60’s/early '70’s.