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Edited on Sat Mar-27-04 01:58 PM by LastDemocratInSC
In the elementary school I attended in the late 1950s there was a policy that the teacher wouldn't start the pledge of alliegance until "all hands are over the heart" and wouldn't start the morning prayer until "all eyes are closed and every head is bowed for Jesus". I wasn't particularly religious or patriotic in those days - most children aren't. Most children are concerned with family, friends and the necessities of life instead of the finer points of nationalism or religious doctrine. I remember placing my hand over my heart, closing my eyes, and bowing my head obediently. Go along and get along, I guess.
There were several times during those early years when some children didn't go along with the class. On those occasions I can remember that the teacher told us that so-and-so hadn't cooperated with the class but that she would go ahead with the pledge or the daily prayer anyway and that our two recess periods would be cut by 15 minutes on that day. You can imagine what happened on the playground after that happened.
Yes, the teachers relied on peer-pressure to take care of those pesky little problems.
In later years, as my young brain began to actually think, and my conscience began to feel for others, I learned that those troublemakers were the smartest in the class and my best friends in the long run.
I was in my grandson's kindergarten class a week ago in Virginia and all the children are required to say the pledge - just a mass of words with no meaning. They just want to have a good time and play.
He has no idea what any of the pledge means but he can memorize and recite as well as any person I have ever known. Anything to get more time on the playground, I guess.
Edited to remove un-cut text that I forgot to remove.
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