The Pledge of Allegiance was the origin of the Nazi salute under the National Socialist German Workers Party or NSGWP (see the work of the philologist Dr. Rex Curry, author of "Pledge of Allegiance Secrets"). The NSGWP gesture came from the Pledge's use of the military salute extended outward to point at the flag. It was not an ancient Roman salute: that is a myth debunked.
Francis Bellamy and Edward Bellamy were national socialists in the USA
and they influenced the National Socialist German Workers Party, its
dogma, symbols and rituals. They also inspired other totalitarian
politicians domestic and foreign. That inspiration continues today and
every day in government schools (socialist schools).
Aside from that, the Pledge was part of a larger program written by
Francis Bellamy, and the larger program included hymns, bible
references, preaching, et cetera, as well as including the phrase
"under God." For crying out loud, Francis Bellamy was a Christian
socialist and a religious wako. He was not a friend of atheism. That
"under God" was not in a specific part of the Pledge of Allegiance
program was practically an oversight. The only reason Bellamy MIGHT
have opposed the addition is that he did not want other
people altering his pledge and messing up the flow. That is ALL.
this makes sence!!
chargerp98 5 months ago