When I was growing up, I was a very patriotic little kid. I had a U.S. flag hanging in my room and I read U.S. history and surrounded myself with information about why the United States was great. I was the poster child for the patriotic little kid that many people want their own kids to be.
At this point in my life, I’m disturbed by what I grew up learning and with what I became. It leaves me wondering how we can teach children to be mindful of their communities and appreciative for where they were born, but without turning them into the mindless acolytes of state religion that results from patriotism in most cases.
For many people, patriotism has become nothing more than worship of the government that rules the land they were born in. It’s a kind of statist religion that demands slavish devotion to a government whether it’s right or wrong. I certainly don’t want to teach the future children I hope to have to hate the land in which they were born, but I don’t want them blindly obeying a government, either. How can we strike a balance?
I have three ideas that I think might create better outcomes. See if you think these would help strike a middle ground.
I was a terrible preacher, because cookie-cutter truth seemed empty
If Court reverses Roe v. Wade, we’re facing a social tsunami
Rodney Dangerfield wasn’t funny, but tenacity built career as comic

Despite liberal predictions, ending gun bans didn’t lead to Wild West
OK, morons, we’ll finally admit it: We really are smarter than you
Goodbye, Amelia (2000-2013)
Doing the right thing frequently requires breaking immoral laws
Most of nature follows instinct, but humans often ignore voice
Do we really need so much ‘stuff’? Do we own it? Or does it own us?