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Topic started on 11-2-2003 @ 09:37 PM by All Seeing Eye
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Pepsi has a new Patriotic can coming out with pictures of the Empire State Building and the Pledge of Allegiance on them. But Pepsi forgot two words
on the pledge. "Under God." Pepsi said that did not want to offend anyone. If this is true then we do not want to offend anyone at the Pepsi
Corporate office. If we do not buy any Pepsi products then they will not receive any of our monies. Our money, after all, does have the words "Under
God" on it.
If you agree with this policy, please pass this word to everyone you know. Pepsi doesn't have the right to rewrite the Pledge Of Allegiance! Let's
see how many people are offended without the words Under God" being IN the pledge.
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reply posted on 11-2-2003 @ 11:47 PM by AegisFang
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well i was boycotting pepsi because of the Osbournes being their spokes people. but this takes the cake, never will a pepsi product touch these lips
again.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 12:54 AM by thehippiedude
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hmmmm...... i remember when i was a kid in school every morning we would stand and say the pledge before class started, ( awww the 70's....). Man if
pepsi does this, it will make me wanna boycott their products. I dont care for pepsi really.......but i think it would be hard to give up dr. pepper
though. That would be lame if they found needles in their cans this year.
But....
Heres 1 good reason to drink pepsi this year....
www.cnn.com...
a billion $ would just be great
[Edited on 12-2-2003 by thehippiedude]
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 07:38 AM by William
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Um... wasn't the original pledge authored without "under God", which was later added under the Eisenhower administration?
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 07:59 AM by Gazrok
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Personally, I am not a believer in God (nor would I trust such a deity if he did exist, based on his temper tantrums in the bible). The original
pledge did not have those words, they were an add in. Therefore, I recite the pledge as it was written, staying silent during the Under God phrase.
The "In God We Trust" on money, and the "Under God" in the pledge, are the last remnants of a failure to separate church and state, and a direct
violation of our Constitution...  I am more of the opinion that you please keep your beliefs off of my money and out of my life if I so wish it... I
don't go ramming my beliefs down others throats, I appreciate the same...
*goes back to drinking his Diet Dr. Pepper...*
[Edited on 12-2-2003 by Gazrok]
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 08:07 AM by Lupe_101
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hmmmm, looks like under the new TBATS regime my last post was removed, which was a shame, because it pointed out that the pepsi god thing is an urban
myth. quite an old one actually.
www.urbanlegends.com...
for future reference, Its usually quite easy to spot an email myth without having to go track it down.
but this sites quite nice for explaining why and how these things exist.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 08:48 AM by K_OS
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Sorry guys but the pepsi pledge thing is an urban legend.
Check out this link:
www.snopes.com...
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 08:48 AM by K_OS
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Sorry Lupe didn't see you had already posted it.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 08:59 AM by Lupe_101
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no probs.
It needed saying twice anyway.
;P
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 09:00 AM by Gazrok
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my comments remain the same...
[Edited on 12-2-2003 by Gazrok]
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 09:06 AM by Byrd
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Eye -- Re the "Under God":
That was NOT in our pledge in the first place.
The Knights Of Columbus (a Masonic-TYPE group, though not Masons) were the ones who started a drive to add those words to the pledge (and "In God We
Trust" was another phrase not originally in legal documents or on currency until a coalition of churches lobbied for it and got it in the early
1900's www.religioustolerance.org...
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 09:28 AM by John bull 1
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I can see why the religeous may be inclined to boycott Pepsi so I've found an alternative for all those soda addicts in the USA.
external image
A soda that God truley would approve of you drinking.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 10:26 AM by observer
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 (and "In God We Trust" was another phrase not originally in legal documents or on currency until a coalition of churches lobbied for it and
got it in the early 1900's 
I have to disagree with this. It was lobbied for by church groups but it was actually Salmon Portland Chase who had it stamped on the greenback when
he invented the greenback. He did all this as the Sect of the Treasury during the Civil War in Lincoln's first term cabinet.
<---------------a pic of the Chase dude.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 02:10 PM by MidnightDStroyer
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Originally posted by William
Um... wasn't the original pledge authored without "under God", which was later added under the Eisenhower administration? 
Yes, this is true...However, our founding Fathers had strong Christian beliefs influencing them when they wrote up our original Founding Documents.
Even though they never *specified* a seperation of Church & State, it seems (IMO) to have been their *intentions* when drafting those
Documents...After all, one of the Rights granted to citizens is the right to worship as *you* see fit, not how any particular religion or the State
itself may *want* you to worship.
...I drink tea...My wife drinks coffee...This is what we use for our "caffine-substitutes"...
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 07:43 PM by James the Lesser
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Don't drink Pepsi! They wrote the pledge like it was originally!!!! So evil!!! How dare they make the pledge constitutional!!!! They will all
burn in hell!!!!!!!
Sorry, but people, pledge never had under god till church whined and paid off people.
And Knights of Columbus, are they a KKK group? I know of the White Knights of Christianity, the Kights of Whites, and a few other Knights of
whatever, but don't remember a Kinghts of Columbus. Of course, in old days many pwoerful people were part of KKK. Many politicians, like sneators
were KKK members, some even leaders of that sect/group/whatever that answered to the grand wizard. And they very christian. So would understand how
the unconstitutional under god got in on a Nation oath, a State power oath.
Yes, I know the paid people off is opinion, but also opinion that oil companies paid off politicians to continue their ways. The oil companies get
special treatment from their freinds in congress, oil companies get away with things that are on the line of legal with no questions asked.
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reply posted on 12-2-2003 @ 08:06 PM by TheBandit795
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Originally posted by MidnightDStroyer
 Yes, this is true...However, our founding Fathers had strong Christian beliefs influencing them when they wrote up our original Founding
Documents. Even though they never *specified* a seperation of Church & State, it seems (IMO) to have been their *intentions* when drafting those
Documents... 
MD,
Of the quotes I have read from your founding father's, I had come to the conclusion that they were not christian. Unless those quotes are false.
(quotes widely found on the net)
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reply posted on 13-2-2003 @ 12:49 AM by MidnightDStroyer
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Some sect of Christianity or another...The actual *names* of thier religious beliefs varied from person to person but the Founding Documents show
strong Christian influences in the rights, duties & responsibilities that they described in the texts.
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