Pledge Allegiance: From Hand Over Heart to Fist in the Air

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There was a time in this country when disagreement did not mean disloyalty. Americans argued, campaigned, and fought political battles with gusto, but at the end of the day they still believed in America as a nation worth protecting. You could dislike a president, question a policy, or even march in protest, but one thing was almost universally understood. You never rooted against your own country. That kind of betrayal was not just frowned upon. It was unthinkable. Because underneath all the noise and arguing, there was still a shared conviction that America was, at its core, a force for good in the world.

That conviction was not theoretical. It was reinforced daily in quiet, unifying rituals. Millions of schoolchildren stood each morning, placed their hands over their hearts, and pledged allegiance to the flag. Not to a politician. Not to a party. To the republic itself. For most, it was the first lesson in gratitude and loyalty. It reminded children that no matter how different their lives were, they shared a national identity that mattered. You were part of something bigger than yourself.

This unity extended far beyond the schoolroom. It played out in civic life. There was a time when Americans lined the sidewalks to watch parades honoring veterans, national holidays, and shared heritage. No one asked who you voted for before clapping as the flag passed. There were marching bands, fireworks, and a sense of belonging that needed no explanation. Patriotism was not an act of defiance. It was a shared celebration of the only country on Earth built on the idea that ordinary people deserved freedom.

Compare that to today. Crowds still gather, but not to celebrate. They gather to protest. Not to honor the country, but to condemn it. Demonstrations have replaced parades. Destruction has replaced celebration. People take to the streets now not to show pride, but to show anger. Too often, they do not seek to fix a problem. They simply want to create one. There is no longer shared joy in being American. There is shared outrage in tearing America down. The shift is not subtle. It is a cultural reversal that should trouble anyone who values national survival.

This shift from patriotism to performative outrage can be seen clearly in one of the most famous modern acts of so-called protest. When former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick took a knee during the national anthem, it was widely praised by activists as a courageous stand against systemic racism. What is conveniently forgotten is that he did not kneel under President Trump, but under President Obama, a black man elected twice by the American people. If America were the unrepentantly racist nation he claimed, that would have been impossible. Just as revealing is the fact that Kaepernick was not a thriving superstar making a moral stand. He was a struggling quarterback whose career was collapsing. He needed attention, and he found it by disrespecting the flag. Even more ironic, he himself is of mixed race and was raised by a white adoptive family that provided him the very stability and opportunity he now calls evidence of oppression. This was never about principled resistance. It was about visibility. He was not kneeling to raise up America. He was kneeling to raise up himself.  To save his career.

Meanwhile, the simple act of flying the American flag is treated as a suspect gesture. Loving your country has somehow been rebranded as a form of hate. A disturbing number of young Americans now speak of patriotism the way earlier generations spoke of treason. In their worldview, loyalty to the United States is not a strength, but a crime against someone else. This is not a harmless trend. It is the cultural equivalent of attacking the foundation of a building and then wondering why the walls are collapsing.

At the same time, we have allowed millions of people to enter the country without any expectation that they embrace American values. In the past, immigrants arrived eager to become Americans in full. They learned the language, adopted American customs, and began identifying themselves as part of the nation rather than permanent outsiders. Many even voluntarily changed the spelling or pronunciation of their surnames to better fit into the culture. That was not forced. It was a choice born of pride and belonging.

Court and census records show ordinary families like Kowalski becoming Cole, Schmidt becoming Smith, and Goldberg becoming Gold, all by their own decision. They were not trying to erase their history. They were signaling to their new country, I belong here and I want to contribute and fit in, and I’m willing to prove it. Today, there is a growing belief that assimilation itself is a form of oppression. People now arrive, plant the flag of another nation on American soil, and then demand the rights and privileges of American citizens. That is not how a functioning country survives. If someone refuses to stand for the nation they benefit from, what loyalty do they truly have?

There is a simple test for anyone who claims to love this country. If you want to enjoy the freedoms and protections America offers, then you should be willing to say the words I pledge allegiance and actually mean them. If you prefer to march in the streets waving the flag of another country, then perhaps that is where your allegiance lies. No one is forced to stay in the United States. But if a person chooses to remain here to enjoy its benefits, they should also accept the responsibility of loyalty. You do not get to exploit the freedoms of a country while working to tear those freedoms down.

The consequences are already visible. A recent poll showed that only a minority of Americans consider themselves very proud of their country. Among young adults, that number collapses even further. We are raising a generation that does not believe the United States is worth defending. That shift is not merely disappointing. It is dangerous. A nation cannot endure if its citizens no longer believe in its right to exist. You cannot preserve freedom in a culture that teaches people to resent the foundation upon which it stands.

And so we arrive at the great and terrible question of our time. When did loving America become un-American? When did allegiance become offensive? When did the people who simply want to stand for their flag and honor their nation become the ones accused of extremism? The answer is not hidden. It is staring us in the face. We allowed the most unifying traditions to be stripped away and replaced with a worldview that finds moral superiority in constant resentment. We forgot that citizenship is not merely a legal status. It is a relationship between a people and the place they call home.

Perhaps the greatest contributing factor is simply forgetting, or never knowing in the first place, just how lucky we are to be able to call ourselves an American.  How fortunate we are to have that opportunity.  To me this is like a spoil child who does not appreciate what they have because they do not fully understand what it is that they have.  But when you have never experienced real turmoil, real problems, even the slightest inconvenience can seem like the end of the world.  We have far too many Chicken Littles running around saying the sky is falling and not nearly enough Bald Eagles saying I Love America.  

We can reclaim what was lost, but only if we are willing to speak the truth plainly. America is not perfect, but she remains the most extraordinary experiment in liberty the world has ever seen. Millions still risk everything just to stand on her precious soil. That alone should tell us that the core of this nation is not rotten. The core is still good. What is rotten is the growing belief that loving your home is a form of hatred. If that lie continues unchecked, we will not only lose national pride, we will lose the country that once inspired it.

The pledge ends with “liberty and justice for all.” If that still offends you, the problem is not in the flag, it’s in the mirror staring back at you.

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J. Hartman
J. Hartman
J. Hartman is an American writer and researcher whose work bridges history, faith, and modern society. Born in the heartland of America, Mr. Hartman has lived from coast to coast and internationally, gaining a broad perspective on the issues that shape our world. His views are grounded in knowledge, faith, and lived experience, drawing connections between past and present to uncover lessons that remain vital today. Through Heartland Perspective, he seeks to rekindle honest conversation, critical thinking, and the enduring values of faith, family, and freedom on which this great nation was founded.

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