One interesting thing to note is that if you’re accustomed to pledging your allegiance to something every day as a child, while you’re still unable to enter into legal agreements and aren’t thinking about them, it may not occur to you that when you go to school on your 18th birthday, you’ve just pledged your allegiance in a way that… might be legally binding?
I suppose it could, yet countries don’t require you to do anything to place you in such legal binds. They have laws about “treason” that they can apply when people from their population don’t act out allegiance, whether they have pledged it or not.
Sure but the people have to enforce those laws (the government is something like 3% of the population from what I understand, which means that the people could overwhelm them easily), so if the concept of allegiance is foreign to them, as opposed to being very familiar and feeling like an obligation, or if they haven’t witnessed all the OTHER citizens pledging allegiance, it might feel like an empty word they can safely ignore.
I suppose it could, yet countries don’t require you to do anything to place you in such legal binds. They have laws about “treason” that they can apply when people from their population don’t act out allegiance, whether they have pledged it or not.
Sure but the people have to enforce those laws (the government is something like 3% of the population from what I understand, which means that the people could overwhelm them easily), so if the concept of allegiance is foreign to them, as opposed to being very familiar and feeling like an obligation, or if they haven’t witnessed all the OTHER citizens pledging allegiance, it might feel like an empty word they can safely ignore.
If the concept of allegiance becomes completely foreign to the citizens of a country, than the country effectively ceases to exist.