Part of the problems in America today— —me, me, me—I want this, I won’t do that—Make me—You and who else?—The government needs to pay for it (schooling, smart phones, housing, health care, yada, yada, yada)— —is because kids grow up with no allegiance to anything, including their families and their country.
We used to think about the words to the Pledge of America on every school day, at every school or sports event, and at every public meeting. How long has skipping the Pledge of Allegiance been in vogue? Is there a connection between the failure to recite the Pledge and the disconnect of our younger generations to a sense of dedication and responsibility for self and others?
Since my husband died in a military plane crash before our son was born, I have difficulty understanding the thinking of people who can’t pledge allegiance to this country that’s given them so much.