Check it out
here. A taste:
Really?
As George Washington was about to step out on the balcony to be
inaugurated somebody suddenly thought, “Oh shit, we need to have some
kind of oath for him to take?” But this is the ridiculous story that the
new White House chief of staff actually believes is “generally
accurate” — a story that would be hard to believe even if the
president’s oath weren’t right there in the freakin’ Constitution. But
it is in the Constitution, a “piece of paper” that you would hope that
someone who has risen to as influential a position as John Kelly has
would be intimately familiar with.
When
Ray Soller,
who deserves the credit for catching Kelly’s historically absurd oath
story, emailed a number of people, including myself, about this back in
May, I was appalled by it for two reasons — not only because I’m someone
who has been
fighting the Christian nationalists’ revisionism of American history for over a dozen years, but also because I work for the
Military Religious Freedom Foundation
(MRFF) and have been watching with horror as the same historical
revisionism that for years has been steadily making its way into our
public schools, the halls of Congress, and even Supreme Court opinions,
has also been creeping into our military, with the most well-known
Christian nationalist historical revisionist,
David Barton, speaking at our military bases and his
books
and videos being found in military base libraries — including the
libraries at several of the military service academies and the
military’s other colleges.
Not only did Kelly tell his completely insane story (which of course also included the
long-ago-debunked myth
that George Washington added the words “so help me God” to his oath) at
the commencement at one of our military service academies, but his not
knowing that the president’s oath is in the Constitution went completely
unnoticed by every news organization that covered this commencement.
The only attention at all that was given to John Kelly’s incredible
display of constitutional ignorance came from a few bloggers who, thanks
to Ray Soller’s alerting them to it, posted about it on their blogs.
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