Why wont they say what they believe?
Published on April 29, 2004 By greywar In Politics

            Yesterday while leading the House of Representatives in the Pledge of Allegiance Rep. Jim McDermott (Democrat – Washington State) gave the C-SPAN cameras a bit of showmanship. When McDermott got to the words “under God” in the pledge he very visibly shut has mouth and clamped his lips together, as though highlighting that he would not say that particular bit of the pledge. McDermott was in close-up for the whole pledge and was informed that it would be so prior to broadcast. For those unfamiliar with the pledge of allegiance I reprint it below :

 

I pledge Allegiance to the flag
of the United States of America
and to the Republic for which it stands,
one nation under God, indivisible,
with Liberty and Justice for all.

            While I am not a religious man and have no particular attachment to religious terminology in government, there was in fact something here that offends my sensibilities: McDermott wont admit why he did it! This I find repulsive. After the Representatives office was inundated with people disparaging him for the recital, McDermott did not say that he did so out of opposition to the words “under god” in the pledge. He did not say that he omitted the words to emphasize his opposition to anything smacking of Church and State. No, instead Rep. McDermott’s office apologist Mike DeCesare put forth the excuse the McDermott had made a mistake. He explained that McDermott had been taught the pledge as a child without the words under god (the words were not added until 1950) and simply had a mental slip. I find this to be slippery at best. 50 *years* are not enough to have re-memorized it? Please, do not insult my intelligence Mike DeCesare.

            The icing to this cake came later when Mike DeCesare changed the story! The second explanation was that McDermott was unsure if he should say the words because a recent ruling by the 9th Circuit Court was being deliberated upon by the Supreme Court and had not been resolved. He did not want to run afoul of the courts. Assuming you overlook the howling illogic between the first explanation and the second, (they both can’t be true), I still find McDermott’s response to be cowardly.

            If you hold a belief hold it. Don’t make a half-assed political grandstand play on national television and then shrink away at the first hint of criticism. Tell me what you believe Jim. I may not agree with it but I will certainly respect you a lot more for it.

            

 

 

            


Comments (Page 2)
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on Apr 29, 2004
Ah, yes... life with Greywar. Gee, I'm feeling better already!
on Apr 30, 2004
I wish I could be living with Greywar.
on Apr 30, 2004
LOL. The Congressman's ass covering is hilarious.

"Excuse: A lie you tell yourself that no-one else believes anyway."
on Apr 30, 2004
Isn't McDermitt the idiot who went to Iraq to support Saddam in the run up to the gulf war?
on Apr 30, 2004
Yes he was also one of the folks who went on that trip. Mr. Wardell Just out of curiosity, did you mean to feature my commiseration article? I honestly thought that the Pledge article stood a better chance... Just asking...
on Apr 30, 2004
lol.
on Apr 30, 2004
I'm at my limit today. Too much to do, too little sleep. I have acute Modernlifeitus.


I'm sorry. I know that feeling all too well.

You can come and stay with me if you want a break from it. Up here in SD we don't have much moderlifeitis at all.
on Apr 30, 2004
There's nothing worse than somebody who won't stand by his beliefs.
on Apr 30, 2004
who do you mean super?
on Apr 30, 2004
Jim McDermott.
on Apr 30, 2004
okeedokee. I entered late I guess. Carry on!
on May 03, 2004

Just as a comment, my father was a Presbyterian minister, and I was in training to be one, neither of us say the pledge, at all, with or without "under God".  Why?  Because we consider it swearing allegiance to a false idol, the flag.


While I respect that my father and myself are not  in the majority, it brings up an amusing point, at least from my perspective.  Y'all are saying this congressman is a bad christian and a bad american for not saying under God, but from certain peoples perspectives, you're a bad christian if you say the pledge at all.


That's not my point of view, by the way, just something to think about.


Cheers

on May 03, 2004
I said neither of those things, my point is that if he holds the beleif that the Pledge should not have "under God" in it then he shoudl be man enough to admit it and not just fold like an origami bird under a bit od politcal pressure. It is his cowardice that disgusts me.
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