The Supreme Court is deliberating over the phrase "under God" in the pledge of allegiance today. From what I've read and seen, the only person in the story with a proper understanding of religion is the atheist, Michael Newdow, who is suing to have the words removed. He argues that the words "under God" obviously refer to a deity and by reciting the pledge, schools are teaching kids that God exists. Newdow doesn't believe that is true, and therefore doesn't want his tax dollars paying for teachers to tell his daughter that her daddy is wrong. I have no problem with this line of thinking.
However, everyone else, from the judges to the people being interviewed on the street, seems to. They think Newdow is wrong to think that the pledge is actually referencing a single deity. They claim that the phrase "under God" means something other than it's plain sense meaning. They say that it refers to a love of country or an ambiguous "life force" and, for all intents and purposes, "god" can be whatever you want it to be. Or, they say, the phrase doesn't mean anything at all - nobody pays any attention to it anyway - and therefore it doesn't matter if you leave it in the pledge.
This is a ridiculous approach to religion and to the issue of the pledge. Everyone with half a sense of history (and who hasn't been sucked in by postmodernist thought) knows what the words are referring to - the Christian God of the Bible. And as such, there are only two real questions to answer in regards to this case:
1. Does this God exist and what is He like? - Obviously this is not an issue for the courts, but it is the ultimate issue in this case.
2. Should the government be in charge of educating our children? Newdow argues that the government should not be indoctrinating theism because some people in the democracy don't believe it. Fair enough. But if they don't indoctrinate theism, that means they indoctrinate atheism. After all, indoctrination - the teaching of what reality is all about - is what schools do. That is the nature of education. They have to teach some worldview. So who decides what the government teaches? Therein lies the problem. If you try to implement a single, state sponsored education system in a pluralistic country somebodies beliefs are to get trampled on because you can't teach all worldviews at once. (To reiterate, choosing "no religion" as a school's worldview, which is what Newdow wants, is to teach practical atheism, which is just as much a religion as the rest.) I think the solution is to privatize education. If Newdow doesn't want theism taught, he should find or start an atheistic school. And for those who want theism, or Buddhism, or whatever ism, let them teach what they want. And then lets all meet once a week or so to discuss which ism is true. I know which one I'm betting on.

I don't understand why school's must teach some religious worldview as you state. The government has no business taking a stance or even being involved in religion in any way bottom line.
School's are for educating our children, either teach all forms of religion (I want one nation under allah, god, yahweh, zues etc) or none at all. Having the government sponsor one worldview above all others is absolute BS Don and im suprised your for it.
Parents shouldn't have to create their own private schools to have the teaching of religion left between them and their children. That's insane.
What's funny i was right with you on the article nodding my head with what you were saying until that line (make their own schools if they dont like it etc).
Posted by: Bri | March 28, 2004 at 05:55 PM
Let me clarify a couple of things. I am not saying that the government should continue to educate our children under one worldview. I don't want the government in the education business at all. All I was saying is that it is impossible to teach more than one worldview at the same time. For example, if you teach "all religions are equal and you can choose whichever want you want", that is in itself a worldview, and, ironically enough, one that does not match any of the religious worldviews it is purporting to support. No religions teach that "all other ways of understanding reality besides the one I am teaching you are valid." That would be incoherent nonsense. Therefore, since it is logically impossible to teach several worldviews at the same time, schools should be orgainized around whatever worldview the teachers believe is true. And keep the state the heck out of it.
Posted by: Don | March 29, 2004 at 04:31 PM