Anonymous wrote:The pledge is nothing more than a loyalty oath, and as such should have no place in our allegedly free society.
Anonymous wrote:We had lots of student protests when I was in high school - - 70's in MoCo. I don't even remember what they were about (the Vietnam War was over ...) they probably were poorly executed, maybe not thought out too well BUT the important thing - BY FAR THE MOST IMPORTANT THING - is we were receiving the (unspoken) message from adults, our parents and the school administration, that our involvement mattered. We were not silenced. We entered adulthood engaged and wanting to be active in our communities.
Anonymous wrote:We had lots of student protests when I was in high school - - 70's in MoCo. I don't even remember what they were about (the Vietnam War was over ...) they probably were poorly executed, maybe not thought out too well BUT the important thing - BY FAR THE MOST IMPORTANT THING - is we were receiving the (unspoken) message from adults, our parents and the school administration, that our involvement mattered. We were not silenced. We entered adulthood engaged and wanting to be active in our communities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not the flag that the players are protesting, btw. Trying to reason with somebody who can't even grasp that simple fact is pointless.
Sorry. When you sit or take a knee during the anthem, you are protesting the flag and what it represents. Why can you not grasp that? How is taking a knee during the anthem (which honors our flag and country) anything else? That is why people are upset.
You want to protest the police? Do something else.
The national anthem includes the statement that the United States is the "land of the free." This protest originated by protesting escalating violence by state actors against African Americans, violating their basic freedoms. Further, some are now protesting that our president is going out of his way to advocate restricting expression, limiting the freedom to express one's views through peaceful protest. Both of those attacks on freedom are at the heart of this protest. Regardless of the reasoning for the first protester kneeling rather than sitting, protesters now can be understood to be protesting that our national freedoms referenced in the pledge are being eroded through violence taken disproportionately against African-Americans and through our chief executive advocating restrictions on expression.
Those freedoms include the right to refuse to stand up during the National Anthem. They are free to choose to sit, take one knee or two knees, or lie down on the field to show how they feel. But other people have the same right to disagree with that choice and to think that refusing to stand during the anthem is a poor choice to use as a vehicle of protest.
Freedom allows choices and also allows the ability to voice disagreement with choices.
Anonymous wrote:It's not pretty, as are many medical procedures. And it's far more offensive than the Women's March signs so STFU.
Why is it offensive to you? It's real. Those signs are just words.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like they have you brainwashed. No one "supports" abortion, but they support having the choice. Basic women's rights.
Well, seeing those pictures shows what the "choice" is.
It's not pretty, as are many medical procedures. And it's far more offensive than the Women's March signs so STFU.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like they have you brainwashed. No one "supports" abortion, but they support having the choice. Basic women's rights.
Well, seeing those pictures shows what the "choice" is.