I'm sorry it went over your head, but I don't think I can dumb it down much more.Were you presenting an argument? I hadn't noticed.
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I'm sorry it went over your head, but I don't think I can dumb it down much more.Were you presenting an argument? I hadn't noticed.
I'm sorry it went over your head, but I don't think I can dumb it down much more.
Since when is showing due respect to an office "kowtowing"?Yes. The kowtowing to government authority is a holdover from the English Monarchy. There are no kings, viceroys, nobility, or crowners in this country. "All men are created equal."
Since when is showing due respect to an office "kowtowing"?
In a free society, respect is something freely given, not something demanded.Since when is showing due respect to an office "kowtowing"?
What you're missing is that requiring that someone stand as a judge enters is not demanding respect for that man. It is demanding respect for an office.In a free society, respect is something freely given, not something demanded.
We are a nation that is based on the proposition that "all men are created equal." We are a nation based on the legal principle that all enjoy "equal justice under the law."
When someone must demand respect, it is obvious he has not earned it.
When a person is forced, against his will, to offer obeisance, we are no longer a free country.
As a former officer I did not demand respect. I earned respect. And once earned it never again has to be demanded.
As to the OP. The man obviously no longer had a great deal of respect for the country which the flag and pledge stand for. I disagree with him, but I will also defend his right to express his opinion. That is what freedom is all about.
If you can demand he think like you and act like you and believe like you, then neither you nor he is actually free. Both are in bondage.
That is not what we, as a nation, are all about.![]()
We are a nation based on the legal principle that all enjoy "equal justice under the law."
No, Woody, I think it might be you who is missing the point. Any office of government is one appointed by the people for the benefit of the people. Their office is not higher than our office of law abiding citizen. In fact the opposite is true. Their office is subordinate to we, the people.What you're missing is that requiring that someone stand as a judge enters is not demanding respect for that man. It is demanding respect for an office.
All men are created equal. And demanding respect for an office doesn't change that.
Respecting an office is not saying that the person in that office is higher, or better than you. It is showing that you understand the significance of that office, and the justice/leadership/etc that it represents.No, Woody, I think it might be you who is missing the point. Any office of government is one appointed by the people for the benefit of the people. Their office is not higher than our office of law abiding citizen. In fact the opposite is true. Their office is subordinate to we, the people.![]()
Respecting an office is not saying that the person in that office is higher, or better than you. It is showing that you understand the significance of that office, and the justice/leadership/etc that it represents.
You still don't understand, Woody. They are public SERVANTS. There office is an office of SERVICE to us, we the people.Respecting an office is not saying that the person in that office is higher, or better than you. It is showing that you understand the significance of that office, and the justice/leadership/etc that it represents.
You still don't understand, Woody. They are public SERVANTS. There office is an office of SERVICE to us, we the people.
The obeisance is a hold over from when there were commoners and gentry. King Alfred (9th century) instituted a new level of government called the "shire" and appoint a "reeve" to represent the King, and insure the King's commands were obeyed by the commoners. (This is where we get our word "Sheriff" - he who makes sure the government's laws are obeyed.)
The Shire reeve was the police, the magistrate, the judge, and even the tax collector. He held, literally, the power of life and death over the commoners (see Robin Hood for an example of a Shire reeve.) A commoner was forbidden to sit in his presence without his permission under penalty of whipping because he was the personal representative of the King.
Today, in our society, the judge does not represent the king. He represents the people.![]()
If, in fact, that government has acted in a respectful way toward we, the people.So we stand in All Due Respect for the "Peoples Government " and what has been done to maintain it.:thumbs:
If, in fact, that government has acted in a respectful way toward we, the people.![]()
I understand perfectly. I've known about shires and have taught others on the etymology of "Sheriff". What's different is "we the people" elected these officials, and "we the people" decided it was proper to respect the offices by standing, and "we the people" decided it was disrespectful to not stand.You still don't understand, Woody. They are public SERVANTS. There office is an office of SERVICE to us, we the people.
The obeisance is a hold over from when there were commoners and gentry. King Alfred (9th century) instituted a new level of government called the "shire" and appoint a "reeve" to represent the King, and insure the King's commands were obeyed by the commoners. (This is where we get our word "Sheriff" - he who makes sure the government's laws are obeyed.)
The Shire reeve was the police, the magistrate, the judge, and even the tax collector. He held, literally, the power of life and death over the commoners (see Robin Hood for an example of a Shire reeve.) A commoner was forbidden to sit in his presence without his permission under penalty of whipping because he was the personal representative of the King.
Today, in our society, the judge does not represent the king. He represents the people.![]()
Yes, because this goes along with everything that Jesus taught about treating others how they've already treated you.If, in fact, that government has acted in a respectful way toward we, the people.
The mayor was out of bounds. What if instead he had gone ahead with the pledge and then noted the person sitting with a comment like "I note that not everyone stood for the pledge, I'm thankful we live in a country where that is possible. I hope in the future you take the time to thank the service men and women who bravely and sacrificaly ensure you can continue to excercise your freedom."