[September 8th
marked the 125th anniversary of the first publication of the
Pledge of Allegiance, in the popular magazine The Youth’s Companion. So this week I’ve AmericanStudied this
complex shared text, starting with a repeat of one of my oldest posts and then
moving into four new ones. Leading up to this weekend post on the very salient
question of the worst and best versions of allegiance!]
On what
allegiance too often means, and what it might instead.
As I write this
post in early September, a Cleveland
police officers union has announced that its members will not hold a flag
during the festivities before the first Cleveland Browns regular reason
football game of the season. The union is angry that a number of Browns players
have been kneeling during the national anthem before the team’s preseason
games, and has pledged not to participate in the pregame ceremony as long as
the players continue their silent protests. (It might be relevant to know that this
is the same union that since May of this year has fought
for the continued, consequence-free employment of the two police officers
who shot and killed 12
year old Tamir Rice in November 2014.) While this action is more specifically
linked to the argument that the kneeling players are “disrespecting” or even “attacking”
law enforcement, is certainly also echoes other statements (many made in recent
weeks by former NFL players and commentators, and of course many more made over
the last year since Colin Kaepernick began his protests) that the protests are
also “disrespectful” or even “unpatriotic” toward the flag or the United
States.
That’s what “allegiance”
is often taken to mean, of course. A kind of loyalty that is dutiful and
obedient, that follows the rules of what to do during an anthem, that indeed
treats those social mores as nearly as sacrosanct as the rules about proper handling of
the flag itself. Such obedient allegiance to a nation not only doesn’t
require independent thinking or action from its citizens, it actively discourages
them, at least when it comes to the shared spaces and occasions in which we
demonstrate our allegiance. The Kaepernick situation has laid bare the truths
at the heart of such narratives of allegiance as plainly as could be: this is a
young man who has exercised his rights of free speech, peaceable assembly, and
protest as calmly and respectfully as I can imagine, and yet he has been
treated and responded to by a significant portion of his fellow Americans (and
apparently the entirety of his league’s powers-that-be) as if he is some sort
of domestic terrorist or the like. When it comes to obedient allegiance, to
paraphrase Anakin Skywalker
as he becomes Darth Vader, if you’re not with us, then you’re our enemy.
Yet as I’ve
tried to argue throughout this week’s posts, that’s not the only way to think
about allegiance, nor the Pledge to it. My most
recent book made the case for the concept
of critical patriotism, and I would say that if we are to take such a
concept seriously, it would have to entail spaces and ways in which we could
exercise that form of patriotism communally. What precisely would that more
critical form of allegiance entail? Perhaps something as simple as a moment of
silence at the end of the Pledge or anthem, in which we’re asked to think about
something we would like to improve or strengthen in our national society or
community, and then to share our answer with a neighbor. That’s simply a
symbolic gesture, of course, but that’s all that these pledges and anthems are,
symbolic representations of the national community and identity to which we are
dedicated. Isn’t it time we strove together to embody a more thoughtful and engaged
version of both allegiance and America?
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other takes on these questions or the Pledge you’d share?
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