Drive-thru pharmacy to pick up your medicine are wonderful especially when you have a sick kid in the car
@413TomaccoRoad3 ай бұрын
Pharmacies?
@FRAME5RS3 ай бұрын
Or elderly people with mobility issues.
@janfitzgerald36153 ай бұрын
@@413TomaccoRoadyou’ve never heard that term for the part if the drug store that prepares your prescription?
@413TomaccoRoad3 ай бұрын
@@janfitzgerald3615 Read the original comment...
@Mikedeela3 ай бұрын
@@413TomaccoRoad apothecary for those of you on the east side.
@deborahryan84523 ай бұрын
The pledge of allegiance was just something we did. I’m 75 and I still can remember it. I never felt as though I was being forced.
@SičhaŋǧuWičhaša3 ай бұрын
I know right, we just did it. If you live in America then you should be willing to pledge to the flag.
@blueboy42443 ай бұрын
plus you can do it in funny voices to crack up your classmates and piss off the teacher
@independentthinker89303 ай бұрын
I'm 72, we did as well, said a prayer as well
@BTinSF3 ай бұрын
It was a routine part of the beginning of the school day. Kids hardly paid attention or noticed what it meant. They just did it. By the way, they can force you to stand up if they insist (I doubt they do any more) but they can't force you to say the words. You can stand there silently if you are the kind of kid who actually thinks about the issue.
@AnneBiebrich3 ай бұрын
I am 68 and yes it was the beginning of each school day. All stood, placed our right hand over our heart and recited the "Pledge of Allegiance ". I think it was a good thing to instill patriotism
@ticamatthews3 ай бұрын
I'm 48 and I never felt forced to say the pledge of allegiance, much love and appreciation from Kentucky ❤️🙏❤️🇺🇸
@vikingmetaldragon23 күн бұрын
You didn't feel forced because you didn't question it. You just played your role as a good little robot.
@Xtylaw2 ай бұрын
I am so used to British slamming our culture in the US and it was refreshing how nice you were. Thanks for the video! ❤
@JoannDavi3 ай бұрын
No problem with The Pledge. It's to the country, not to a person/leader/dictator.
@tomcollens46213 ай бұрын
It does, however, brainwash you to have a “my country right or wrong”. Not good. We need to hold our country accountable for stupid moves.
@mpls19823 ай бұрын
No, it's a pledge to some vague idea or arrogance. Real patriotism is protecting the rights of all Americans. Real patriotism is improving the lives of Americans. The pledge is lazy faux patriotism that conservatives lap up.
@rebeccasponderings84593 ай бұрын
Technically, it is a pledge to the flag. And then the republic it represents.
@thecrazeygamer3 ай бұрын
Yeah, although I'm soooooo glad It's optional
@jmb3d3 ай бұрын
That's because you are used to it. But just switch little White Kids to little Asian Kids in North Korea, instantly you think those poor kids are being brainwashed.
@maverick44623 ай бұрын
We usually just laugh at prescription commercials, right about the time they start rattling off the plethora of sideffects.
@lynnw71553 ай бұрын
My mother used to pay attention to the drug ads. Once she decided she absolutely needed something to help with prostate problems...she wouldn't listen to me that she didn't even HAVE a prostate. Fortunately the doctor still gets to make the decision on drugs.
@BTinSF3 ай бұрын
@@lynnw7155 But the doctor doesn't have the time to argue with patients who demand some drug they saw on TV.
@darkchia003 ай бұрын
@@maverick4462 Side effects may include everything you're taking the medicine for in the first place... and possibly death. ☠️
@neutrino78x3 ай бұрын
@@BTinSF bro, he's not going to prescribe a drug for a woman's prostate. If he gives you a drug it's because it's his considered medical opinion that you need it.
@LJBSullivan3 ай бұрын
Some of the names sound like girls names.
@ritaadams81903 ай бұрын
I’m of an older generation. Saying the Pledge of Allegiance meant that you were showing respect for your country. I was and am very proud of saying it. We also say it at sporting events.i love it.
@jessica35483 ай бұрын
I've never heard the pledge of allegiance at a sporting event...
@RavensInWinter3 ай бұрын
@jessica3548 that's surprising as I still do. Even at my school sporting events
@welcome2myhappyworld3 ай бұрын
@@RavensInWinterThey sing the National Anthem at sporting events, but I've never heard the pledge recited there.
@thatonemelody2 ай бұрын
@@jessica3548i dont either but i normally hear it as specific school events like graduating and stuff
@vikingmetaldragon23 күн бұрын
Proud of what? You didn't do shit.
@LadyWolf812 ай бұрын
Im proud to be an American. Im proud of my country and no one is forced to say the Pledge of Allegiance. The history of the national anthem is a tear jerker and honestly i am proud to know my ancestors had such strength and conviction.
@theone123492 күн бұрын
If you think you’ve never been forced to say the pledge, it may because you never tried not to say it.
@ryanduggan76323 ай бұрын
“What’s Tyranny?”😂😂The hilarious irony of a Brit saying that😂
@whiteowl40973 ай бұрын
LMAO!! 🤣🤣
@ArchimGregorios3 ай бұрын
Even more ironic, is that as a University graduate, Lewis doesn't even know what it means! Makes me question the quality of his University education in the UK.
@donniemjr753 ай бұрын
Right! They just had a police commissioner threaten to extradite and imprison Americans for things said on social media, so his not understanding what tyranny is shouldn't surprise anyone. smh
@BTinSF3 ай бұрын
@@ArchimGregorios I don't think the Brits want to dwell on that little bit of 18th century unpleasantness and why should they? They gave up on us and went and conquered India.
@annfraley-mylife3 ай бұрын
Cracked me up that immediately after that, he was distracted by the free refills and forgot all about it.
@JuanGarcia-tb7ph3 ай бұрын
I’m 36 and nothing gave me more pride than pledging allegiance and singing the national anthem. My immigrant parents instilled in me a love for America.
@pamlindquist28613 ай бұрын
Glad it worked for you. For me, it was an insult. Having to promise, and keep promising to do something. Like, why? I said it once, why do you doubt I'll follow through?
@rebeccasponderings84593 ай бұрын
I love the National Anthem and hate the Pledge of Allegiance. For me, it is about the history and purpose behind the writing of each one.
@I-can-c-u3 ай бұрын
I like it too. And the national anthem is beautiful!
@JamieHertter3 ай бұрын
If you'd been born in Australia do you think you'd still love the USA? Patriotism is so weird to me.
@I-can-c-u3 ай бұрын
@@JamieHertter yes, that’s why a lot of people from all cultures move here and many become successful. I think I like it.
@Jenjen20213 ай бұрын
As a legal immigrant, I had the honor of reciting the Pledge of Allegiance as a child. It made me proud
@1-God1-Truth1-Life1-Forever3 ай бұрын
The honor? Shame on you.
@kaynesovereign93723 ай бұрын
I have a problem with the pledge myself. But not because it’s not honorable to pledge loyalty to your country. Unlike the comment above mine who likely has a problem with loving your country. My problem is in the wording of the pledge. The very first words in fact… “i pledge allegiance to THE FLAG”… I don’t think we should be pledging loyalty to a piece of cloth. lol
@KatyS963 ай бұрын
Same lol when I learned it, it made me feel included.
@kaynesovereign93723 ай бұрын
@@KatyS96 - and that’s one of the main points of the pledge and nationalism in general. A lot of American academic college commies and champagne socialists love to hate the US and view nationalism as synonymous with xenophobia. However the point of nationalism and patriotism and pledging allegiance and singing national anthems is because a functioning society requires a core unifying fabric holding it together. The love of one’s country and the values and principles of your country were always something that should bring everyone together. It used to be things like religion and cultural homogeneity but in a free society those values are less consistently shared. These days even that core principle of country that everyone in the world used to be able to rally behind is being undermined in the west. So it’s good to see that that you and the op are proud and feel included by things like the pledge. People like you give me hope unlike the guy up there who shames people for feeling honored and connected to a unifying social fabric.
@Ophelia_Pain3 ай бұрын
In the 80's we had to say it every day in the morning before class started. They stopped doing that sometime later, I can't remember when. I was pretty young. I do know if you join Boy and Girl Scouts, they make you always recite the Pledge of Allegiance, and the Scouts honor and taps at the Flag ceremony. I was a camp counselor for a Girl Scout Camp for the Summer, You had Flag, every morning and evening. Taps was sung in the evening.
@lindamiller24322 ай бұрын
Love the pledge of allegiance! It's to our flag/country, not a dictator. VERY PROUD. I never felt forced at all
@vikingmetaldragon23 күн бұрын
Proud of what? You didn't do shit.
@wvrjl21 күн бұрын
When you're brainwashed, you never do.
@ACCER3 ай бұрын
Drive through pharmacy is one of the best inventions EVER. For some bizarre reasons, the pharmacy in most places is located to the back of the store. I've actually chosen a pharmacy based on foot print of the store because I was so sick and had to get my own medication. The being able to drive through means someone who is sick/injured doesn't have to navigate the massive distance from the door to the pharmacy and then back. It also means exposure to contagious illnesses is largely contained.
@emmaipsaro47113 ай бұрын
I feel this. I have asthma and had just left the hospital one day due to breathing problems. I then had to walk all the way to the back of the store to get my prescription for my inhaler. It was horrible having to walk that far not being able to breathe properly.
@kathleen_003 ай бұрын
Pharmacy's I believe, I happen to work in one, are in the back so you have to walk thru the store and therefore more likely to do some impulse buying on the way there. 3:33
@Jennifer_Layne3 ай бұрын
You’re exactly right. The pharmacy is ALWAYS located in the back of places. I never realized that until now.
@martina219533 ай бұрын
@@kathleen_00 It doesn't work. I rarely purchase anything other than my meds.
@christycase23243 ай бұрын
All stores have a point of sale (POS) that's why candy is always at the register and anything else the store wants to get rid of quickly.
@sandystatom98863 ай бұрын
No one is forced to do it. In the 80s, we had kids that didn’t want to do it and they didn’t have to. I was raised by military parents so I’m proud to say it.
@blazeup75013 ай бұрын
We were forced to stand though
@Boy3ga3 ай бұрын
Really just depends tbh. I had a teacher who would write us up if we didn’t do the pledge but then I also had a teacher who said to at least stand for it.
@blazeup75013 ай бұрын
@@Boy3ga damn lowkey im sure he could have got fired for that or something
@michellelewis71613 ай бұрын
You can't be forced technically, but the societal pressure is strong.
@wesewpro3 ай бұрын
In Chicago, we had to do it
@rebeccawilson79533 ай бұрын
I am the child of a military man, the pledge and the anthem are a great way to honor our country.
@patrickelliott21693 ай бұрын
No. Fir two reasons - 1. No mere child has any real understanding of what it even means. 2. The way it is worded is as an oath, and there is literally NO instance, outside that pledge, in which anyone, civilian, political, or military, which REQUIRES daily repeating ones oath/pledge. Well, in a free country anyway...
@roseannburgess203 ай бұрын
@@patrickelliott2169when you love your country and respect those who fought and still fight for AND honor those who died fighting for the country that you love then you don't look at it as something you HAVE to do.. its an honor to do it and shows the pride you have in your country.
@popepimpler34672 ай бұрын
Hate the pledge bc it feel almost communistic. The anthem makes me feel like a proud American.
@popepimpler34672 ай бұрын
@@roseannburgess20the pledge doesn’t rep the people who fight for us it’s repping the government. The anthem reps the military and everyone who fight for our freedom. The pledge feels like tyranny and the anthem inspires. Two very different things.
@chrissyg552 ай бұрын
@@roseannburgess20 This country doesn't love some people who fought for it, built it, and still fighting for it, especially when the 3rd verse of the anthem was written in a negative light. Children should not be pledging to anything. I am an Army Vet.
@danacrow-qt5dz2 ай бұрын
Nothing wrong with having pride in your country and knowledge of his history. I taught for forty years and my classes not only broke down the pledge line by line but also the national anthem and several other patriotic songs and sayings.
@dee_8053 ай бұрын
As an American, I can confirm drug adverts are the worst. They are so long, overdone, and annoying. The fact they have to say “if you’re allergic to any of the ingredients, you should not take this medication” makes me want to lay face down on the floor. Plus, the actors are always wearing clothing you’d find at JCPenney or Kohl’s and it’s a disturbing mix of pastel polo shirts and capri pants. Freaky.
@Thomas.36983 ай бұрын
Perfect description
@traciemcdaniel36603 ай бұрын
Most of the side effects are worse than the condition! Lol a lot of them one of the side effects is, may cause death.
@lindasmethers61683 ай бұрын
@@traciemcdaniel3660 Because of the really bad side effects of the current batch of latest and greatest medicines, not to mention the outrageous cost, I always try to steer my doctors to the older tried and true ones. Not only are there fewer side effects, the effects long term use are also known. An added bonus is they cost almost nothing.
@robtooley40023 ай бұрын
They are actually wearing the colors of the drug logo. I have started watching commercials trying to match all the colors in the logo to the clothes and scenery. I find it amusing. There's a dishwasher detergent ad that is so green and purple like the logo its pretty obvious. But a fun one is the Oh Oh Ozempic one where the people are dancing in the street and the lead woman changes clothes for another scene. I love that one because if you pay attention to the background, its the city streets area of the Universal Orlando theme park! It's the little things that entertain me. 😂😅
@D3M3NT3Dstrang3r3 ай бұрын
I stated in another post that I think it is ok and maybe even beneficial to have them but damn are they ever overdone, annoying and too freaking abundant. As a matter of fact advertising in general may be more tolerable if there were a variety of different ads for products and not the same 2 damn drug commercials repeating for 5 minutes every break.
@tammycenter87573 ай бұрын
Most of we older Americans will take home the food we have left over at a restaurant because we were taught not to waste food. Also I paid for it and I intend to eat every bite. If I get to eat it twice then I pretty much just got 2 meals for the price of 1. Can't beat that deal.
@scrap4u13 ай бұрын
Especially when food was short. Like the depression or the Second World War.
@cathyrowe5943 ай бұрын
Especially with the skyrocketing prices these days, you bet I'm taking the leftovers home!
@marciaskinner85463 ай бұрын
Our portions in the USA are so large that I ask for a box right after the waitress brings my food. I put 1/2 the food to take home so that I don't overeat, plus it can be another meal for later.
@kaydublin51643 ай бұрын
Great idea
@ambermcrann328517 күн бұрын
As a Canadian growing up in elementary school we sang Oh Canada, wich is our anthem, every morning to start the day. We also sing in during sport games or during special days like Remberance day, Canada day etc. I am proud to stand and sing it with my hand over my heart, even if I'm at work I'll stop and show my pride and respect for my Country by sing it.
@Fotograffa11 күн бұрын
I'm a hockey fan and know your anthem as well as my own. I remember watching a game o TV I think it was in Toronto. Something went wrong with the sound system and everyone in the maple leaf garden stood up and sang the US anthem...I cried my eyes out. That was the nicest thing I've ever seen. Thank you, Canada 🇨🇦
@lilred683 ай бұрын
I'm 56 yrs old and was never FORCED to say anything in school. We WANTED to say the pledge. Every morning we said the pledge and EVERY morning we sang our National Anthem as the music played over the loud speaker. We LOVED every minute of it.
@kimberlymandera76723 ай бұрын
Yes! My immigrant grandparents were sooooo proud when I finally memorized them both.
@KrazyFiberKat13 ай бұрын
We had students who were asked to stand for the Pledge, their religious beliefs didn't allow swearing or pledging.
@stevenricks17033 ай бұрын
53-year-old American here. Speak for yourself. I said the pledge because I was an impressionable child and the adults told me to, not because I wanted to. We also sang (in elementary) after the pledge. I didn't *hate* it, but also would not have been remotely disappointed if they discontinued it.
@viciousoz41883 ай бұрын
22 years old. I refused because I thought it was pointless and a chore (in elementary school)
@Koakoa453 ай бұрын
It was never forced and by high school they stopped doing it as you just went in and straight to first class like college. if you didn't want to do it, you just napped or goofed off as long as you were quiet.
@mindaleigh6793 ай бұрын
“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.” That's the pledge. Every morning in school we'd stand and put our right hand across our chest and recite this. I'm 29 and from West Virginia. I'll never forget it lol
@lorrahowell35673 ай бұрын
I'm 64, from NC, also never forced, I was proud to pledge allegiance to the flag, and looked forward to it every day!
@lorrahowell35673 ай бұрын
Also, if more people knew the pledge, they'd know the USA is a Republic not a democracy.
@svartrbrisingr61413 ай бұрын
i for one did forget it, and now that im older wow it sure is pretentious. especially the "One nation under god" part. but im not shocked as america was founded on the made up ideals of a make believe highly narcissistic diety.
@Denzie1243 ай бұрын
I remember this as a kid. And I’m from Texas so we had our own pledge we said after the US pledge. “Honor the Texas flag, I pledge allegiance to thee. Texas, one state under god, one and indivisible.”
@tonisuesmith61253 ай бұрын
I'm proud to be an American! We taught the pledge at young age to install A love of our country . nearly everyone who said it as a child remembers it or most of it . I was proud to put my hand on my heart and say it and then sing the national anthem. Still am I will always stand in respect to our flag . its a privilege not a forced thing .
@jen23223 ай бұрын
Maybe that's where the patriotism comes from, every M-F morning, for 12 years of school, I pledged allegiance to the flag. But I never felt forced or uncomfortable doing it. It was just part of our daily routine. 🗽
@jpbaley20163 ай бұрын
Patriotism is respecting all the amendments and the Declaration of Independence that states that we have the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Using religious rhetoric to deny women and LGBTQIA of their unalienable rights is NOT patriotism.
@kelliepatrick5193 ай бұрын
You didn't feel forced, but you were. It's an expectation that very few kids/parent dare to defy in Public schools without substantial backlash.
@JuanGarcia-tb7ph3 ай бұрын
I felt pride in this morning routine 🫡🇺🇸
@mpls19823 ай бұрын
How is that patriotism?? It does nothing for anyone.
@svartrbrisingr61413 ай бұрын
after 1st grade when i started thinking for myself it felt very forced and i just stopped participating in it and would just keep in my seat and read. slept through it a few times as well because i couldnt care less about it. its just useless words to me.
@lisalfrank2 ай бұрын
I'm 59 never felt forced to say the pledge of allegiance always felt proud to say it. always stand up put my hand over my heart and pledge allegiance to the United States I love my country.
@Candy-O17763 ай бұрын
I still stand and put my hand on my heart when I hear the pledge and National Anthem. I was a. Classroom teacher for 4 decades and my kids loved it too, we had to take turns holding the flag. I taught my boys to remove their hats or caps during it as a matter of respect for our country. They told me they stood and took their hats odd during the parade, but many people didn’t. They saw…
@dkat80873 ай бұрын
The US Constitution gave us "the right to bear arms" because they had just fought a war to break away from another country and knew that if we hadn't been able to defend ourselves, we'd still be British citizens. We really (maybe my sarcasm wasn't as obvious as intended with that "sorta") like being Americans, so we value our guns! 🇺🇸 Most of us also like being able to defend our selves and our homes without waiting for the cops to find us (A LOT of us don't live near a town).
@VisualAssault20113 ай бұрын
The Constitution does not "give us the right to bear arms". The Bill of Rights simply affirms rights that all people have.
@dkat80873 ай бұрын
@@VisualAssault2011 "...the right to bear arms shall not be infringed." sounds like a pretty clear statement to me. Yeah a lot of blood guy she'd to actually GIVE us the right, but this is the statement that "makes it official."
@nursedro23732 ай бұрын
If we lose the first and second amendments (free speech and right to bear arms) the USA ceases to exist. That’s what keeps the “people” with the power to keep the country free.
@lisafarmer60713 ай бұрын
One of the radio stations I listen to does the Pledge of Allegiance at noon every day! Coming from a family with a lot of people that have served in the military, we absolutely respect the flag and stop for the pledge EVERY time!
@myaa50382 ай бұрын
I'm 59. When I was in grade school, we had to say the pledge followed by singing the first verse of either 'My Country Tis of Thee' or 'America the Beautiful'. As children, we didn't think anything of it. It was just part of school.
@BellevueBarkhouse3 ай бұрын
I got married in 2015, in the drive thru chapel by Elvis in Las Vegas (on purpose). We had a BLAST!
@peterkozak92123 ай бұрын
I’m 67 and I was always proud to recite the pledge of allegiance and I never felt like we were forced to do it, it was just what we did everyday to start the school day off.
@lindasmethers61683 ай бұрын
Jury duty - the last time I was called for jury duty, it was for a murder trial. I was asked if I had a problem with such a case. I replied "do you have a problem with someone who believes in the death penalty with no appeals? After all, the victim got no appeals." The lawyers gasped, then the judge dismissed me. I've never been called again!
@kristinabc11433 ай бұрын
I completely get this reaction to people who murder others … however, we still need civic minded people to do their duty, otherwise if everyone refused to be on juries, then no one would ever have a trial by their peers. It would be only judges making the decisions, and we all know how most of them would rule, be-damned the evidence. JS. However, having said this, having served on a jury a few times it is frustrating to serve with people with no damn common sense, who don’t follow the evidence, but go by FEELINGS 🤦♀️
@Im_NotSure3 ай бұрын
@@kristinabc1143jury duty is such a waste of time, i’ll never do it again
@julcarre3833 ай бұрын
I've never been called to jury duty, yet lol
@aks42043 ай бұрын
@@julcarre383you will probably get it in the mail tomorrow, just because you said you never did. lol You probably jinxed yourself.
@kevinkilpatrick25363 ай бұрын
@@julcarre383I went many years with out being called. I registered to vote and now I get one about every 4 years.
@julieo45802 ай бұрын
I have a video of my niece saying the Pledge of Allegiance when she was maybe 4 or 5 and it's so adorable. It was a big part of every school day and we got to put our flag up each morning when we were in 5th grade. We learned how to fold the flag and how to respect the flag and NEVER letting the flag touch the ground. Nobody was forced to say the Pledge.
@Banyo__3 ай бұрын
I grew up in the 80s and 90s and have zero childhood trauma about being "forced" to say the pledge. We would come in to class, the teacher would ask us to rise, and we would say both the US and the Texas pledge, and sit back down. After elementary school (after age 10), we never had to do it again. No one complained, no one filed lawsuits, no teacher ever threatened us to say it. It was just another part of your day. Years ago they had a podcast about whether people thought it was wrong, and everyone calling in was not even phased. It did make you feel this bit of patriotism and respect for your own country but it wasn't about brainwashing us or recruitment into some organization where we had to worship our leader or else.
@stevenricks17033 ай бұрын
I had a classmate who was a Jehovah's Witness, and did not recite the pledge because of his religion. As far as I know, no one ever game him grief about it - not the adults, anyway.
@Alannaryshati3 ай бұрын
That’s because all the lawsuits about it were made in the 1940s. And the supreme court ruled that public schools couldn’t force students. That’s why they would do the pledge but you were not in trouble if you didn’t participate.
@Banyo__3 ай бұрын
@@Alannaryshati That's not entirely true. The first lawsuit in the 40s was about a Jehovah Witnesses request not to salute the flag/say the pledge, but the Supreme Court ruled against it, before reversing a few years later. This was prior to the addition of the phrase "under God" that was not added until '54 under Eisenhower. There have been several lawsuits made in the 2000s+ regarding both the use of the phrase "under God" (this case was lost) and the ability of school districts to even require students to stand and say the pledge if they don't want to. It's basically now boiled down to this. Students are not required to stand/say the pledge (in some states only with parental permission signed with their school). This does NOT apply to private schools as they aren't bound by the first amendment.
@tanyamushaney27433 ай бұрын
What is the Texas pledge? I have never heard of that.
@naughtyvalues3 ай бұрын
@@tanyamushaney2743 Honor the Texas flag; I pledge allegiance to thee, Texas, one state under God, one and indivisible."
@brandonhunter30363 ай бұрын
Pledge of allegiance. My 7th grade year, I would stand but not recite the pledge. My English teacher asked why I stopped. I explained that the verse, *_”…one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”_* felt like a lie because of all of the social injustice. She explained to me that it’s not an expression of what is, but a “solemn oath” for each of us strive toward creating that world every day. From then on I felt proud and like it was my civic duty to remember that every day.
@foreverautumn26253 ай бұрын
I love your teacher’s explanation. That’s a great way to look at it.
@DMBabyGurlAdventures3 ай бұрын
I remember people didn’t have to say the God portion if it was against religious beliefs. Many complained in our state at least but it’s on purpose money and I always said are they going to refuse to spend cash too?
@animatorstanley3 ай бұрын
My dad was handicap most of my life, things like drive thru banks really helped him.
@Ilovelife1104Ай бұрын
I am an immigrant who became US citizen and never felt forced to Pledge allegiance but felt privileged and honored to do it. I love America and am proud to be an American!
@elizabethc38423 ай бұрын
I think teaching children that we pledge our allegiance to our country, not because we are being tyrants but because we are showing that we are proud to be an American and proud to live in a free country. Children need to be taught what those words they are saying truly mean and what the benefits we gained from the fight our founding fathers did to give us our freedom from tyranny
@martina219533 ай бұрын
The flag and the Pledge of Allegiance took on a whole new meaning when I grew up. My dad was drafted and survived the Battle of the Bulge. He went on to be very successful.
@mildredpierce45063 ай бұрын
I’m 61 and grew up with the pledge but we were never taught what it meant.
@Pocchari2 ай бұрын
I had no idea what the pledge meant until at least college because the meaning was never taught to us and by the time I would’ve understood it (like 3rd or 4th grade?) it was something so ingrained and routine that the words meant nothing. After grade school I never thought of it again, until it crossed my mind totally randomly and I suddenly realized those words meant something and it wasn’t just word salad. Now I think it’s just as weird as any foreigner does that we were made to say that every single morning with no explanation as to why. To me only people applying for citizenship should say it. I was born American, pledging my allegiance to the flag almost everyday from ages 5-14 is just silly and wastes time.
@dianetravels3 ай бұрын
The pledge is something that most people love doing. It's awesome to be American. We like to pass that on to our children. Patriotism
@Lynn705Hal3 ай бұрын
It was brainwashing. It was forced on us. That's communism, not democracy. And that whole part about liberty and justice for all, yeah, give me a break.
@marshsundeen3 ай бұрын
I say it, but I think part of being a good citizen is examining our mistakes in history, and learning about them so we don't repeat it.
@bradc61993 ай бұрын
@@marshsundeena great example of a mistake in history is electing Leftholes.
@eldupont30953 ай бұрын
the people i grew up with regarded it as a monotonous chore to endure, lol
@j.w.greenbaum78093 ай бұрын
I grew up with the Pledge of Allegiance at the beginning of the school day and am 76. We were all very patriotic then and I still am. I had an academic scholarship for tuition and books and worked in high school through college to pay for room and board.
@auntiedoodles68982 ай бұрын
The pledge of allegiance was started in 1893, to celebrate the opening of the 1893 Colombian Exhibition World Fair in Chicago. The poem was distributed to schools throughout the nation to be recited at the same time as the fair was opened by Grover Cleveland.
@lindaelia26163 ай бұрын
I’m a teacher 60 and I still do the Pledge of Allegiance in my classroom.
@mbourque3 ай бұрын
Y'all are getting screwed with the drinks. I saw a documentary years ago that it cost less than a quarter (25 cents) to make a gallon of soda by the soda companies, and they sell it to the restaurants for dollars and the restaurants mark it up several hundred percent for each glass they sell. That's why we get free refills, because it barely costs the seller to give refills and it makes the customers happy.
@joshuacoldwater3 ай бұрын
I ran a restaurant for YEARS. The cost of a glass of coke is around .03-.05 here in the USA
@theshig96183 ай бұрын
Most of the cost of a soda for a restaurant is the cost of the cup.
@sherryford6673 ай бұрын
@@mbourque And exactly how does that show that we're getting screwed. We're still getting free refills, and you're not. And btw, did you also research how much cups cost and how much it costs to make ice and to keep it frozen? Your logic that we're the ones getting screwed is highly illogical. I guess you're the really lucky ones because you don't have to tolerate free refills. 🙄
@charlesbrown44833 ай бұрын
@@sherryford667 How many glasses of box wine did you have before you wrote this comment, Sherry?
@sherryford6673 ай бұрын
@@charlesbrown4483 Straight to the personal invectives. Absolutely no content. You must be a very frustrated and angry guy.
@ReneeShires3 ай бұрын
When I was a kid, we were taught the history and meaning behind every line of the pledge and then given a choice if we want to say it
@JulesfromHouston3 ай бұрын
While I was in college, I also was a substitute teacher in middle school. One day the Social Studies teacher left instructions for the students to read silently for the entire period. When I told the students they groaned, so I offered instead to read them what I needed to study for that evening's test, and they jumped at it! I then told them that I needed to explain the Preamble to the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. They groaned again, but we went through it line by line and amendment by amendment. They learned a lot, I aced the test, and their teacher called me the next day to laughingly thank me. 🤠
@HoosierJedi3 ай бұрын
The pledge is literally two sentences.
@sherryford6673 ай бұрын
@@HoosierJediRight, but far too long for the victim class.
@HoosierJedi3 ай бұрын
@@sherryford667 Brosis, it doesn't even take five minutes.
@Im_NotSure3 ай бұрын
@@sherryford667why do you even care if other people do or don’t do the pledge? it doesn’t affect you at all. sounds like YOU want to be the victim
@dawnsoger67292 ай бұрын
When my youngest was in NICU, (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit) I was reading in a magazine about Respigam. I asked the pediatrician if my son would be receiving Respigam? The doctor told me “No.” 89 days (maybe less) when he was being discharged from NICU, I was told “You will need to bring him in on this schedule so he can receive his Respigam IV treatments.” (Hmmm. The only thing I can guess, is that the Doctor told me “No.” because my son was not expected to survive!) I’m happy to report that he recently celebrated his 28th birthday. I will admit that Respigam was traumatic! One time, they had to do 11 IV attempts in order to get the IV started in his head 😢😢😢.
@shellyshelton58196 күн бұрын
Wow that had to be horrible.hospitals are horrible! I have Crohn’s disease was hospitalized 8 times in a year once for 30 days. I can’t imagine 89!!! I have bad vains too and people don’t realize how painful it is when they keep digging for them, I thought getting then in the leg was bad but the head sounds horrible!! I’m glad he’s better. God bless him
@MJ-oe1wj3 ай бұрын
I love the pledge of allegiance. It was a good reminder each morning to have respect for my country. That’s how I learned left and right. We all stood up for the pledge each morning in first grade (maybe second) and put our right hands over our hearts. That’s how I remembered my left from my right lol
@wolfganghumboldt48303 ай бұрын
@@MJ-oe1wj You should not respect your country because you were brainwashed to from a young age. It should come from your real life organic experience. So many people are afraid to admit it is brainwashing when it is the literal definition of brainwashing.
@1000lsharp3 ай бұрын
LOVED the Pledge!!! We all looked forward to it. Was about our Country
@leestudyvin28213 ай бұрын
I’m 71 and we did the pledge of allegiance every year at my elementary and middle school. It wasn’t forced, it was just something we did. Being a Baby Boomer, I think most American adults would say it was a privilege to be in a free country that we could show our respect of our flag and what it stands for. I mean WW2 had just ended 7 yrs. before I was born. We also started the school day with scripture reading and prayer over the PA system.
@HarleyGoat023 ай бұрын
Ditto!
@naughtyvalues3 ай бұрын
Only did it in elementary up until 3rd grade that was 80s
@Friedbrain113 ай бұрын
Same here! Loved it all.
@BarefootCrochet3 ай бұрын
I felt sorry for the couple of kids in my school who didn’t do the pledge. They were some religion that didn’t believe in it.
@duanehellier21473 ай бұрын
There's truth here. It united us under a common goal. We get to join together, no matter your background, and honor the country and the men and women who have given us so much.
@FozzyBBearАй бұрын
[18:35] My first job in the US came with 6 weeks paid leave and every dollar of medical expenses covered. My current job gives me 5 weeks per year, plus an extra week of "wellness days" they added in lieu of a proper COLA last year, but the insurance isn't quite as gold-plated.
@ESUSAMEX3 ай бұрын
We cannot walk into our doctor's office and ask for a certain drug just because we saw the ad on TV. The ad is made so that each person can talk to their doctor about their health. I have asked about a certain drug with my doctor and he or she has informed me why or why not that drug will or will not work in my case. It's all about giving more info to the public. When a family member was ill, my family asked the doctor about a bunch of drugs to help our sick family member. After talking about the issue, the doctor found a drug which worked wonders for our family. Sometime questions lead to better answers.
@barbaramelone10433 ай бұрын
A commercial for the shingles vaccine reminded me that I should get my second dose. It's something that's fairly common, though.
@vleisge3 ай бұрын
And most people just end up asking for the generic to save money.
@Kirinketsu_3 ай бұрын
"We cannot walk into our doctor's office and ask for a certain drug just because we saw the ad on TV" WTF do you mean yes you can, will the doctor give them to you, likely not. What those ads are meant for is if you have what the med is meant to treat and you are on something and you feel like its not working, or if you had no clue theres something that might help you and your doctor hasnt helped you. Many people find help and relief from these ads.
@OohhhhThatKeema3 ай бұрын
@@Kirinketsu_as a PCP at least 3x a day someone walks in and ask me to give them a prescription for something they seen on television
@soupedupcatjazz74433 ай бұрын
The adds on television for prescription drugs are unhealthy and misleading. Singing songs, carrying a happy sign, and all of a sudden I can see...just to mention some, but there's more. Are not a healthy way to get healthier. Going to your PCP before anything is wrong, establishing a base line and utilizing preventative care, leads to a healthier lifestyle. Pills are band aides that lead to more pills. Diet and exercise and living a modest lifestyle is key. I am not talking about people who have disabilities or sudden mishaps, that are incurable or an emergency, which may require prescription meds I am talking about personal health that is controlled by the actions you take.
@tameramcclain7013 ай бұрын
I am a American who lived in England from the ages 3 thru 12. We would sing God Bless The Queen every morning. We did do the Pledge of Allegiance for the first 2 years after I moved back to the U.S. but my children only did it in primary grades.
@frand91743 ай бұрын
No, the reciting of the Pledge of Allegiance is not forced on students. While it is customary for it to be recited in class every day, students are not required to participate. Mandating recitation was ruled unconstitutional in the 1940's.
@lynnw71553 ай бұрын
In my school you had to stand up and be quiet, but you didn't have to say the pledge if you didn't want to. I was always happy to say it...even as a child I was proud of my country.
@elischultes65873 ай бұрын
In the 5 & 6th grades we also added the Preamble to the Constitution, The Bill of Rights, Gettysburg address all ring a bell
@Kim-J3123 ай бұрын
Same here , I grew up in the 70s-80s . I remember standing in class , hand over heart ❤️ and saying pledge of allegiance. Then, in roughly 4th grade 1980s . It stopped or phased out . Kids didn't have to stand or say it , then it was taken out of public schools . Now as adult , I kinda wish they still have the kids say the pledge of allegiance to flag 🇺🇸🫶❤️
@robynbeach31983 ай бұрын
They still say it here. I grew up in the 90s, and I don't ever remember anyone questioning the pledge. We were raised with patriotism and we were proud to say it.
@joseherrera84893 ай бұрын
@@Kim-J312 They still do. Stop listening to those Trumper "facts".
@Prplvlvt053 ай бұрын
Loved hearing your take on differences. Great personality first time watcher. Will subscribe.
@susiebee1223 ай бұрын
my son, in kindergarten, thought it was "for widget stands" instead of "for which it stands". I didn't even realize it until he asked me what a widget was.... I never felt forced to say the pledge of allegience. It just was what we did every morning.
@msears85763 ай бұрын
Priceless....lol!
@anthonywroblewski18023 ай бұрын
With liberty and jugs of wine for all.
@whiteowl40973 ай бұрын
@@anthonywroblewski1802 I could handle a jug of wine about now.
@LindaC-ze5ob3 ай бұрын
How cute!!
@Kim-J3123 ай бұрын
Aw, that is so sweet. "Widget stands" 😅. I grew up saying the Pledge 🇺🇸. I think kids should still learn the pledge and for what our flag stands for 🫶🇺🇸❤
@maryespinoza26323 ай бұрын
I grew up saying The Pledge of Allegiance in school (1960s and 1970s), but I don't recall ever being forced to do it. We all did it like it was second nature, with no complaints. Our school principal was very patriotic, and so were many of us, and many men served in the military. Anyway, I've always felt it an honor reciting the pledge, especially knowing and taking to heart what the words really mean. 🇺🇲 ❤
@hippiemama523 ай бұрын
Lol. We weren't forced to do it, we were programmed. And most of us didn't know (or care) what it meant. 😂
@joseherrera84893 ай бұрын
🤣
@413TomaccoRoad3 ай бұрын
Yes, you could stand there and say nothing if you chose to.
@413TomaccoRoad3 ай бұрын
@@joseherrera8489 How is that comical to you?
@G_Ma_Kat3 ай бұрын
It was just 'what we did' each week, someone different got to be the flag holder. And it was a job everyone liked having. Like being a line leader or line ender (because you were responsible for shutting the door and turning off the lights). Flag holders waved the flag during the pledge of allegiance. And God forbid you got too ridiculous with your waving--that was me--you would lose your job for the rest of the week.😢
@flattop2233 ай бұрын
1:28 when I see an ad for a prescription medication that is for something that I have, I'll go and start doing research and then I'll also ask the doctor about it, if it's better than what I'm taking or not and then I take the doctor's advice. About 20 25% of the time he has me switch medications, but if I hadn't asked I would still be taking the same stuff.
@johnsomn21483 ай бұрын
Thank you, as a retired med lab tech and later a dentist. When ever a patient came in I would review their meds, from my day as a lab tech I did alot of the drug analysis and cultures for bacteria. Was always amazed how so many patients never question their doctors. I'm so bad , my doctor has my medical chart stamped- Non- compliant patient, cause you will get told what test is useless, what drug doesn't work for me. If they try to prescribe something new on the market, you can bet he better know something about the drug outside of what the sales representative said.
@flattop2233 ай бұрын
@@johnsomn2148 I have many many medical issues, I don't have any experience working in a lab or anything like that but I do know more (medically speaking) than most of the general public. And when I get a new medication, I actually read the information sheet that comes in the box with the medication, if the pharmacy does not give me that page I ask for it. The only things I've ever had a problem getting the info sheet on are things that have been out for a very long time and that information is usually online at the companies website, I am sure you know the sheets I'm talking about, the ridiculously large sheet sometimes 23"×35", that is printed in 6pt or 8pt text. My doctor used to basically tell me to shut up, he has 20+ years experience and he will let me know what I need to know, bla, bla, bla... I argued with him, I had several appointments where a nurse came in to make sure everything was alright, because we were both literally yelling at each other. We now get along and respect each other, enough that, I have his personal cellphone number and have been told to call anytime if it's an emergency, if not emergency try to keep it between 8am and 8pm
@babayoga47122 ай бұрын
ALL Drive-throughs are actually VERY helpful for handicapped people, and the drive-through pharmacy is a great way to avoid contaminating the stores door handles and credit card terminals when one is very sick...
@plainjane18123 ай бұрын
In the US you pledge allegiance to the flag and to America. In N Korea, they likely pledge allegiance to the "Supreme Leader". Patriotism is about pride in your country. It is important that we all be united in freedom.
@boredutopia3 ай бұрын
we done that in former yugoslavia, germans done that during hitler's rule, russia still have it, china too... even when i was a kid it was disturbing, like in a cult, at the end all the pledge generations had to do every morning before school started for decades meant nothing. country was torn apart in flames and genocidal wars. it is a brain washing, there is a line about god, not all americans are belivers and yet their kids have to say that line. it is hillarious. the only countries which do that are countries who wants to brain wash their citizens while they ae still kids, so when they are adults have strong patrioti sense and go to wars and stuff without any question it is also done to raise a belife in people since their young age about some kind of supremacy over others, like oh pour country is the best and greatest while in reality US had segregation laws still in 60ties, while in europe that did not exist even before ww1, only when ww2 started europe had it, but forcufly. not to mention how american eneral in 1946 in uk demanded that sgregation laws must be proccessed coz he was angry that local people in their own country sits and drinks and dance in same bars with black people. at the end locals put a sign only for blacks, wich pis** him of so much that he took a squad and shot bunch of people, including 2 african american soldiers. so us pledge served and servse the purpouses i already mentioned...
@kmasse813 ай бұрын
Lol. No matter how you try to justify it to yourself, it's wierd.
@MrColdNight3 ай бұрын
It’s just your not as free as you think and things to be proud of I don’t know look around your city’s people living on the streets and people stoned out of there mind other city’s theft so high stores are closing because they can’t survive places we’re people can’t get clean water health insurance that many people cant pay and even if you can you can still go brock if you get a serious illness and I could go on forever so i don’t know what are you so proud of i used to be proud to until I started traveling around the world sure no country is perfect but believe me the US is far from perfect and there are county’s were your just as free or even have more freedom than you do in the states and there are a lot of country’s were people sure are happier than Americans are that’s fact and a lot of country’s are proud to but they show it in different ways
@JustinMullally3 ай бұрын
I went to a private school in the 90s and we did the pledge of allegiance daily until about 7th grade (12 years old). By high school, I think most of us sat through the reading of it over the intercom. Something that I think separates us from authoritarian run nations is that most kids understand it to be a “motivational” day starter, rather than an actual pledge. Saying “liberty and justice for all!” Is more of a reminder of good values than a statement of obedience. It’s kinda just saying “I promise to uphold the values on which this country was founded, and those values are: we’re all equal and we all deserve our rights. Also, I’m not gonna be a traitor as long as those are the values.”
@yolandaf11223 ай бұрын
I'm from Massachusetts, we did the pledge of allegiance and also sang the American anthem every morning, my daughter is a junior in high school and they don't do it anymore they don't write cursive either but she still knows it, you're adorable I love your reactions to things we do in America keep up the great work I love your smile❤
@gwynethzen77Ай бұрын
Really enjoyed your video! Got my sub! 🙋🏻♀️
@JJ-vt7sh3 ай бұрын
I just retired after 42 years of teaching. No, we did not ever in all those years force students to say the pledge. I had several students who would just sit quietly at their desks or took a step out into the hall. It is required in our state that all classes recite the pledge but not individual students. Maybe it is different in other states.
@lethe56833 ай бұрын
Was forced in my schools all the way through college, otherwise you get in trouble.
@JJ-vt7sh3 ай бұрын
@@lethe5683 I am 70 years old and I was never forced. We didn’t even say it when I was in middle school or high school except at assemblies and not all of those. Certainly never in college.
@MrBigBarrick3 ай бұрын
As an American a fully stand for the pledge of allegiance in schools a lot of schools have taken it out and it has had a huge impact on American patriotism it's not that we think we are better than people when we have pride in America which some people will claim it is it's having pride in what we have accomplished and built as a country
@theloneone75873 ай бұрын
I do remember that some kids would stand but not say the pledge because they were Jahova Witnesses. No one ever said anything about it. It was ok that they did this. My parents who were immigrants told us to say it because it was our country and we should be proud that we were born in the US. I remember my mom telling me that it was an honor to say the pledge of allegiance and that I should really think about the words I was saying.
@kimberlymandera76723 ай бұрын
As the youngest country that ended up a world power💪. We & our forefathers fought tooth & nail for it too.
@stevenricks17033 ай бұрын
I don't think that whether or not the pledge is recited in schools has a measurable impact on American patriotism.
@bobbydigital80563 ай бұрын
@@MrBigBarrick There's nothing patriotic about forcing people to say the Pledge of Allegiance. It's about indoctrinating children at an early age. I know the Pledge doesn't ultimately mean anything but doing away with anything so inherently suggestive is a good thing in my mind. Just like we shouldn't be quoting the Ten Commandments in school, we shouldn't be saying the Pledge. School should be academic only, not political or religious.
@MrBigBarrick3 ай бұрын
@@bobbydigital8056 okay I'm not religious at all but if all you see is a religion in it there's the problem it's about bringing people together I'm making them feel as one except for what we got nowadays which is everyone at odds with each other hence the reason that one's been thinking of civil war and world war because no one can see eye to eye and I never said Force the kids I said I think it should be in schools now it's up to the parents and the child if they want to join in it doesn't take much to sing a 2-minute song before school
@opalcarroll31953 ай бұрын
We said the Pledge of Allegiance and the Lord’s Prayer every morning at school when I was a kid in the 60s.
@peggylee22672 ай бұрын
Me too....in the 70's
@wvrjl21 күн бұрын
I agree about tipping. I am NOT tipping at Subway or when I pick up Chinese food. That's been happening in Canada, too.
@carriegant96133 ай бұрын
He’s griping about everything we don’t “get for free” in the US, but our taxes are a lot lower than in countries who subsidize things like paid vacation, extended maternity leave, & college.
@jodester07283 ай бұрын
I’m 50 and the Pledge of Allegiance was simply how we started our day. I remember a girl whose family was Jehovah’s witness and she had to step out the class to the hallway because her religion didn’t allow her to say it.
@flattop2233 ай бұрын
19:08 if you're pregnant in the US and you give birth, you're going to get a couple weeks of pay from any company but some companies will give up to 3 months, but there's a thing called The family medical leave Act, that makes your employer hold your job for up to a year for you to take off time for medical such as giving birth, then come back and get your job back.
@LJBSullivan3 ай бұрын
I had children yrs ago. It was 4 weeks and back to wk. Husband had no time off. I spent yrs tired. 4 children.
@2009kygal3 ай бұрын
But it's leave without pay. Many can't afford that.
@halley75633 ай бұрын
They might give you time off but a lot of the time it’s not paid. Unless you have pto saved up they are not required to pay you anything and most companies will avoid doing anything they aren’t legally required to do.
@lindacotton40453 ай бұрын
@@flattop223 That would be great if it was actually what they did. Companies will mostly go out of their way not to allow you to do that.
@flattop2233 ай бұрын
@@LJBSullivan that sounds about right for America. Before Obama Care there were people I knew that had "Cadillac" insurance plans, the company had to downgrade the insurance or pay big fines for having too good of insurance for their employees. Anyway, back before Obama Care, they got 3 months paid time off for the mothers and 6 weeks paid time off for the fathers, it did not all have to be taken starting with the birth of the baby, it just had to be used during the first year. That was part of the insurance plan, they also got 3 months from the employer for both mothers and fathers, this had to be used all at once so moms would start on the day they went out to give birth or sooner if they got put in bed rest or something like that, the fathers usually started their time when the mother had to go back to work. I know of one of the couples Mom worked for this company and because their insurance was so much better than Dad's company insurance the family was in Mom's company insurance. The Dad's company gave them fathers 1 paid week when a baby was born, then his company said he could take more time but they would not pay him for any additional time off he took, they were shocked when he asked for every third week off starting 3 months after the baby was born. They were even more shocked when he said their medical insurance would be paying him for 6 weeks of time off. So mom paid time off, 3 months, then Dad takes a week, mom 2 weeks, and they alter that way for another 4.5 months before they have to get a babysitter or grandma to stay with the baby. Their 2nd and 3rd kids were after Obama Care so she got the 3 months the company offered, and dad had changed jobs, no leave for him at all. At least they already had a daycare they trusted and knew the kids were well cared for and loved. I know this because it was my mother's daycare and while my mother passed away 2 years ago, the family and 3 girls are like family, even after my mother retired 6 years ago. Many of the daycare kids and families became our family, we have vacationed together, holidays together and several 9 of the kids have been God children of my parents, both parents are gone now, the youngest of the God Kids is 14 now the oldest is 47. The daycare was in business for 55 years.
@theresahs59562 ай бұрын
I am so glad that I came across your channel! You have a new subscriber! 💛💛💛💛💛💛💛
@meomy293 ай бұрын
I don’t understand why people complain about our portion sizes. If you’re eating at a fast food place, you don’t have to get the largest size meal. Heck, you don’t even have to buy a meal - just get a sandwich and a glass of ice water. If you go out to eat anywhere nicer and the portion sizes are large, split your meal with a friend or take the food home and eat it the next day. Heat it up in the microwave, stick it in the oven or cook it in the air fryer. Good as new.
@briantbmoth64723 ай бұрын
They can order the small portion too.
@eldupont30953 ай бұрын
most people are greedy and will eat as much as they are served, so people think it's irresponsible of the industry to serve portion sizes that are guaranteed to cause a coronary later in life. on the one hand, everyone should practice personal responsibility and not over-feed themselves, but on the other hand, it is clear that the vast majority is incapable of it.
@Kirinketsu_3 ай бұрын
India, Middle East, most of South America, many other places have massive portion sizes also, you order something and they bring you a massive plateful.
@Janice4th3 ай бұрын
When I was in Italy, the portion sizes weren’t big, but there were a lot of courses.
@jordanparker59493 ай бұрын
When I was growing up, no one hated their country, everyone loved their country and their Flag....in America, it's God, Country, and Family.
@Dandee2683 ай бұрын
Exactly 💯
@lindacotton40453 ай бұрын
I never hated this country, I just don’t worship it like the “patriotic” flag wavers in the South and West. I very much respect the government and the flag,- I don’t protest or burn the flag-but I don’t put the country on par with my worship of God. No, one cannot do both.
@Ranger1PresentsVirtualRealms3 ай бұрын
@@lindacotton4045 And quite literally nobody ever asked you to. Allegiance does NOT equal worship. Neither does respect. You should know that by now.
@DanielJayRobinson3 ай бұрын
I find the advertisements about prescription drugs annoying because they literally take up half of all advertising on TV. It's not like it affects me though because I haven't had cable in years but it's mostly elderly people still watching TV which is why they have so many commercials.
@tlake979422 күн бұрын
I loved it and believe we should continue. It was the beginning of the understanding of patriotism.
@daniellelevy80563 ай бұрын
The problem with Sales is that they increase the price and then discount it back to the original price or higher, but it LOOKS like its on sale even though its not.
@cordiagabert25733 ай бұрын
That isn't always true. 😂I do a lot of "window shopping " and can tell if it's true or not. Do your research instead of hit and run believing lies. Jewelry is the WORST offender. Sometimes you can negotiate. Women are easy targets and as a woman I had to learn when a sale is a sale. I love Walmart , but it is an insult to see a markdown sign of- 1 cent or less then 10 cents
@daniellelevy80563 ай бұрын
@@cordiagabert2573 I didn’t say it was always true. And I do do my own research. If you must know Kohls is probably one of the worst offenders as far as brick and mortar stores in at the very least my region of the country, but Amazon has been caught doing it more and more as well. Not everything is an opportunity for you to show off how high your horse is.
@005uz3453 ай бұрын
the month day year date format started in the UK and came over here. With this format the numbers get bigger as you go left to right (1-12, 1-31, 1- infinity). Also, the month is really the most important part of a date, as it is tied to the time of year, and thus the seasons. there is also in use, but to a much lesser extend a year/month/day format that is also used around the world. This format is more useful in databases than the other two.
@crimetimegrime3 ай бұрын
They didn't mention, that a Michigan funeral home has installed a drive-thru window that allows mourners to pay their last respects on the go.
@tammymileski38742 ай бұрын
I’m an American and I only have streaming channels because of all of these pharmaceutical ad’s! And right after that they show you the BIG FAST FOOD AD’s.
@mermaid17173 ай бұрын
The Pledge is still announced every morning in public schools, but you are absolutely NOT forced to stand, cover your heart, or recite it.
@TheLadyniebur3 ай бұрын
Exactly this!
@TwilightPotterLuver3 ай бұрын
Really depends on the teacher and school. Some will threaten detention or getting written up if you don't.
@GoddessFourWinds3 ай бұрын
@@TwilightPotterLuver That's illegal. It's been illegal since 1943. See: West Virginia State Board of Education vs. Barnette. 🙂
@falarine3 ай бұрын
My son says The Pledge and Then the Texas Pledge
@DehydratedHumor3 ай бұрын
@@GoddessFourWinds It's illegal but it definitely still happens.
@marycasanova89053 ай бұрын
Every day at school, not only did we do the pledge, but we also sang the national anthem, mixed with other patriotic songs(my country tis of thee, God bless America) We actually learned the history of why and how the songs were written. Of course there was a bigger emphasis on history, civics, and service
@jikook74573 ай бұрын
I had to laugh about the "West Virginia couldn't get it together" to incorporate the metric system 😅 because, when I was in 6th grade, I think, we started learning the metric system. Or tried to 🤦♀️ It didn't work, so it disappeared. I remember being very happy that it did
@lisabrown6641Ай бұрын
I said the pledge until I became a teenager. When I stopped, my teachers always respected my choice to not participate.
@Nana2KCASBO3 ай бұрын
I moved to Okinawa from USA for years (military) and wasn’t concerned or offended by the size of anything. Food, cars, houses etc. it’s called respect~
@megboyd26093 ай бұрын
Honestly, I think all US citizens should spend some time out of the country- respect is a dying art and the amount of people who never even leave their state is astonishing. (I think the stats are like 1/4 of US citizens never leave the country and 10% never leave their home state?) Nevermind the benefits of a second language for all stages of life.
@Nana2KCASBO3 ай бұрын
@@megboyd2609 I also lived in Germany for seven years and traveled all of Europe and all of Asia so coming back to the US to me was actually extremely shocking on so many levels!
@dlcalbaugh3 ай бұрын
I am 60 years old and I always thought it was great that we said the pledge at the beginning of every day. We also used to say the Lord's Prayer every morning after the pledge. I think it is a great thing to be patriotic and proud of your country.
@lyndabrown34023 ай бұрын
@@dlcalbaugh same here. Pledge and prayer. It wasn’t forced but we were a homogeneous group so no problem.
@MikeJ-j8b3 ай бұрын
The most convincing argument I have heard for keeping the second amendment is that if we get rid of gun ownership only the criminals will have guns.
@WreckerR3 ай бұрын
Then take their guns too...
@Growmap3 ай бұрын
The reason Americans won't give up that amendment is because they know what happened in other countries that did. Can you imagine how much worse lockdowns would have been without them? It is also a huge deterrent to other countries invading the U.S. and sadly, may be needed soon given all the people in over years and what they may be here to do.
@tonisuesmith61253 ай бұрын
Truth!!
@monica-vz6xb3 ай бұрын
But where's the evidence for this. Why isn't this true in Australia?
@MikeJ-j8b3 ай бұрын
@@monica-vz6xb it's because the guns are already here. If you take them away from law abiding citizens do you think the criminals will turn them in. You can make anything you want illegal but it never goes away it just goes underground.
@sheilaslowe634023 күн бұрын
Extremely proud to be patriotic and recite my pledge of allegiance to our country. 🇺🇸🇺🇸
@CodeMonkey763 ай бұрын
I think it's funny when people in the UK think the US electoral system is weird. They don't even elect their Prime Minister...they just elect their representatives and whichever party gets the majority of seats gets to pick their own member as Prime Minister. At least the US system somewhat puts the choice in the hands of the people (albeit not a pure democratic popular vote choice). Glad we don't pick our president by whichever party gets majority in Congress.
@HarleyGoat023 ай бұрын
Well... the Democrats just changed the game. Nominated a candidate that no one voted for. 🙄
@sandybruce90923 ай бұрын
Yes, and look what is happening in England and London!! The British people are being pushed and ousted completely,I enter if a group who elected a person who is in the way to destroying everything British!
@gabrieldacruz31503 ай бұрын
That's what I said exactly
@gabrieldacruz31503 ай бұрын
The funny thing is about the electoral college they don't understand that it's 50s for president And as far as the number of votes say you have a basketball final playoffs seven games so a team can score more points over the seven games and still lose the series
@massmike113 ай бұрын
One must remember that despite how many times you hear it the U.S. is not a democracy. We are a representative republic.
@nicoley21333 ай бұрын
I will NEVER vote for someone who wishes to take my right to carry weapons or who wants to censor my speech. I think it's wrong that places like Germany, and what's going on in Brtian right now, to jail someone for saying something others don't like. It's OUTRAGEOUS!
@wendyl79063 ай бұрын
Did you see they sent Elon a threatening letter today. Elon nicely said FU. Someone else said, remember 1776.
@sarahbritt12343 ай бұрын
Same! 💯
@jstringfellow19613 ай бұрын
Absolutely 100% Thank you. I said something that offended someone when I was in Scotland and they tried to have me fined or detained. I was very offended by the "c" word that they were using after I said what I said, which was to support a Biblical concept, so their cussing and degrading was just as offensive but no one wanted to detain them. I was ASKED my opinion and gave it - - and they weren't happy. Well...."try that in a small town!"
@shelliecollier70173 ай бұрын
I don't really care for the drug adds
@emmteemee3 ай бұрын
I don't mind them as much as the lawyer ads. Except that one for an allergy medication with the woman walking and singing like she's mad at someone.
@annamariavalatka6363 ай бұрын
Same here. They're annoying
@legatomodi35222 ай бұрын
28:55 the berries in crunch berries are the best part of the cereal. "Oops All Berries" is just the berries for real no extra corn based cereal. You eat a whole bowl of it or snack on it all day you will get the most insane looking turds when you take a shit. The poop ends up a luminescent green with usually black lines running through it.
@binnyTruth3 ай бұрын
Nobody is forced to Pledge Allegiance to the flag. We do it voluntarily, even at club meetings, government meetings, and such. We love our country and want to respect it. (For the most part) But if you don't you don't have to participate. We also sing our national anthem a lot. Most sporting events begin with the National Anthem.
@liammorgan21553 ай бұрын
In the 1970s when I was in elementary school we were most definitely forced to do it. We did not have a choice.
@VirginiaPeden-Harrington-qd5zu3 ай бұрын
Many people in the USA identify with their state before they identify with the nation. The pledge of allegiance at a young age is one way to help our citizens remember that we are one nation with 50 states, not 50 nations that share one flag. There is evidence that this does help us maintain a unified identity when it is needed. States and their citizens may rival each other in schools, sports, business, majority religion, among other forms of identity. But when the nation as a whole is insulted, threatened or harmed we will stand together against all external threats. I am an 80 year old PhD scientist and I remember saying the pledge every day because I wanted to feel that pride of unified identity. I never felt forced.
@Alannaryshati3 ай бұрын
American students are not forced to do the pledge of allegiance in school. There was a court case back in the early 1940s where the Supreme Court decided that the free speech clause of the first amendment meant that state funded schools could not force students to salute the flag or say the pledge. Of course most schools do not tell students about this aspect of that right and they start reciting the pledge in classes when students are very young so most people will do it.
@liammorgan21553 ай бұрын
In the 1970s when I was in elementary school, we were absolutely forced to do it. We did not have a choice. I remember that specifically.
@chokolattejedi9 күн бұрын
They might not legally be allowed to force kids, but they 100% do it. Stories abound about non-Christian or other minority families getting upset at the "under god" part and asking to exempt their kid from either that line or the whole thing, and the school giving out detentions, suspensions, scolding from the teacher, etc. Yeah, sure, a teacher can't legally force a kid to do it, but they can stand over them and scowl until they do, or mock them to the class, or force them to go stand in the hall while "all the good children" do it, etc. Or just straight up *lying* that it is illegal not to say it.
@darkur1317 күн бұрын
I love leftovers!❤ it’s one of my favorite things!!!❤❤❤
@Brandi_the_Baker3 ай бұрын
The pledge doesn’t feel forced. It’s just something we did and I love the pledge. Every American should feel American pride.
@stevenbotwin2 ай бұрын
What happened to those who refused to pledge allegiance?
@nicolestyers84842 ай бұрын
As a classroom teacher in a school that says the pledge everyday, it is most definitely forced on most people. I would venture to add that most Americans could care less if kids say it everyday. It’s not respected when you are forced to say it daily.
@Brandi_the_Baker2 ай бұрын
@@stevenbotwin we never had anyone refuse but if you didn’t nothing would happen.
@stevenbotwinАй бұрын
@@Brandi_the_Baker we’ll see if it’s true when someone do refuses, cuz until then it’s just a theory.
@byusaranicole3 ай бұрын
I love that for your day/month vs month/day example, you used the one day of the year that we say like you. "4th of July" is US Independence Day and we say it like that. Other dates we'd say opposite like "December 25th."
@piratetv13 ай бұрын
That's funny. You found the one day we say different. Most of us say "the fourth of July", every other day is like "April twelfth", "May the fourth (be with you)", "March tenth" is sometimes MarIO
@reneemcgowan56843 ай бұрын
It's only "Mar10" in an Excel spreadsheet that hasn't been formatted yet...lol! 😂😂😂
@piratetv12 ай бұрын
@@reneemcgowan5684 but it's also Mario day
@freakinfrugal5268Ай бұрын
Comparing the Pledge to some shit they'd do in North Korea just makes it seem so brainwashy and shady. I like it. I grew up doing it. My kids don't do it in school but were expected to do it at summer camp and I don't think they even knew it. We were at a car show in our town the other day and there was a band and before they started playing, the lady sang the national anthem. Everyone stopped and put their hand over their heart, as my husband and I did. And my poorly raised children just kept walking and chatting. I hauled them up fast, told them to get those hands on their hearts, and to zip it. It shows respect. It makes you think about your country. They should still do it in school. Every single morning in school, we said the pledge, sang My Country Tis of Thee, and said the Lord's Prayer. It was part of our moral grounding. People SHOULD be loyal to their f-ing countries for God's sake. Why do we have to defend the Pledge and the National Anthem and showing some dame respect for our flag?! What I'd like to know is why this seems abnormal? Aren't Europeans loyal to their own countries????
@leanna42713 ай бұрын
14:48 the pledge isn’t forced for most schools now
@scravitz19583 ай бұрын
In ‘72 many of us as a protest of the war in VietNam would stand respectfully but not repeat the words to the pledge, we were asked to leave homeroom (a 10 minute pre-class at the start of school) and go the the library, which we peaceably did. We may have been stupid and stubborn kids but the typical high school administration were deeply part of Nixon group think and more than willing to tramp on our rights so that we wouldn’t spread the disease of being anti-war! Nobody has to say the pledge as long as one is willing to take the consequences! By ‘74 the war was lost and nobody gave a damn what we did, probably caused the start of disco music!! 😂
@michelleN48653 ай бұрын
It was never forced
@bridgetmurphyv3 ай бұрын
@@michelleN4865in my school my homeroom teacher had us do the pledge every day ugh
@michelleN48653 ай бұрын
@@bridgetmurphyv how did they force you to speak?
@Anna-B3 ай бұрын
We’re not forced to do the pledge, it’s just a normal part of the day
@TangentOmega3 ай бұрын
The reason we never converted to the Metric system was because it was so prohibitively expensive to retool the automotive and construction industries. Imagine having the 1979 Mustang using 1/4" bolts and the 1980 model using 7mm. Every repair shop would he required to buy 2 of everything. 😊
@OCWord3 ай бұрын
They already do
@neutrino78x3 ай бұрын
a lot of industrial stuff did switch to SI. I don't work in the computer industry (which I sometimes feel is a bad decision because I know how to program one), but my dad did, when I was growing up, here in Silicon Valley. He is an engineer, BSEE, and he did the white collar design work on magnetic storage; his name is on a couple patents (no royalties; they instead give you a high salary). I can tell you that for example, HDDs or SSDs are typically marketed as "2.5 inch" but all the blueprints for the drives are measured in mm. 🙂 And of course all scientific papers use SI. 🙂
@kc9scott3 ай бұрын
The US auto industry switched to metric anyway in the ‘80s, for the vast majority of parts that the car is built from. There are a few items such as lug nuts, which ordinary consumers interact with, that stayed on US/imperial units.
@dallasarnold86153 ай бұрын
What world are you living in ? Any decent mechanic ( professional or DIY ) already has a set of Imperial and metric tools. I have had both since 1973.
@lexyyl95403 ай бұрын
They still could have changed it. I’m medical and we use the metric system with out meds and fluid counts. Regardless of the industry they should have changed it. The metric system is wayy easier to use.
@TrueHelpTV2 ай бұрын
17:20 The weird health insurance thing is the colleges pull out life insurance on everyone so they can "claim" a loss if you die and don't complete your tuition so they can still get paid for what they assume you're worth to them. What's crazy is depending on the policy, they can actually towards the end, withdraw a large portion of that cash invested (that YOU paid for) and keep it for themselves, effectively sneaking themselves another 5 figures for you going there on top of the tuition you paid. Some large companies lately have been getting caught doing this with their employees.