After a school president officially eliminated the daily recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance, she arrived on campus the next day to find an unexpected surprise waiting.

In the era of liberal progressivism, the Neo-Marxist agenda comes to the forefront. Of course, one of its primary targets for political indoctrination has been the public school system, where it continues to churn out mindless ideologues who avidly regurgitate their fascist professors’ rhetoric.

Disturbingly, the hatred of America and its fundamental values is being pushed by the left in the hopes that it may topple our Constitutional Republic and replace it with a Socialist regime. Unfortunately for these progressive activists, their plan isn’t quite as popular as they think.

On August 7, Lara Zelski, campus president of the Atlanta Neighborhood Charter School, announced that the elementary school will no longer recite the Pledge of Allegiance each morning, although she claimed they would have an opportunity to do so later in the day if they wanted. In a letter to parents, Zelski claimed that students would “not stand and/or recite the pledge” in order to make the school a more “inclusive” atmosphere, local online newspaper AJC reports.

The decision was made “in an effort to begin our day as a fully inclusive and connected community,” Zelski said. “Over the past couple of years it has become increasingly obvious that more and more of our community were choosing to not stand and/or recite the pledge.”

Understandably, the majority of parents and students were upset that the school chose to cater to a tiny fringe minority group instead of preserving values upon which our nation was founded. So, the community decided to come together and show the campus exactly how the pledge removal would go over.

According to The Blaze, campus president Lara Zelski and her colleagues have apologetically backtracked on their decision to remove the Pledge of Allegiance the very next day, after the community inundated the school with angry complaints. Concerned about the swift backlash from parents, it took only hours for the school to completely reverse the decision, allowing students to recite the pledge as they have for decades.

After an uproar ensued, Zelski’s initial letter was quickly removed from the school’s website and exchanged for a clarification from governing school board chair Lia Santos. In the updated response, Santos appears to make deceptive excuses, including blaming the school’s decision on a “miscommunication.”

Atlanta Neighborhood Charter School has and will continue to provide students with an opportunity to recite the Pledge of Allegiance each school day. In the past, the Pledge of Allegiance was recited during our all-school morning meeting, but at the start of the school year, the daily practice was moved to classrooms. This change was done in compliance with state law [O.C.G.A. 20-2-310 (c)(1)] and aligned Atlanta Neighborhood Charter School with most other schools in the state who also say the Pledge of Allegiance in individual classrooms. However, it appears there was some miscommunication and inconsistency in the rollout. Starting next week, we will return to our original format and provide our students with the opportunity to recite the Pledge during the all-school morning meeting.

Santos assured that educators will “respect [students’] First Amendment rights,” promising that the children will have the opportunity to recite the pledge during their morning routine. Still, parents remain wary of the school’s willingness to eradicate a key element of the public school system’s regimen.

In the initial decision, Zelski announced that the daily Pledge of Allegiance would be replaced with a more “inclusive” chant.

“Over the past couple of years it has become increasingly obvious that more and more of our community were choosing to not stand and/or recite the pledge,” Zelski wrote. “There are many emotions around this and we want everyone in our school family to start their day in a positive manner. After all, that is the whole purpose of our morning meeting. “One change that we made to our morning meeting agenda this year is that we will not be including the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance each morning,” Zelski wrote, adding that administrators will continue to ask the children to stand in participation of the school’s “Wolf Pack Chant.” “Students will continue to lead the meeting by asking our community to stand to participate in our Wolf Pack Chant together,” Zelski continued in her letter.

Expectedly, parents weren’t content with the change and expressed their disapproval, eventually convincing the school board to reverse the decision, reimplementing the daily Pledge of Allegiance.

This community has demonstrated the exact way our Forefathers intended for us to preserve American values and liberties. They knew that, in the face of progressivism, we must be endowed with a right to oppose such an infringement.

These parents are teaching their children not only that they must stand up for American values but precisely how to do that in a non-violent way. Hopefully, the school has taken the hint that the majority won’t be bullied by whatever fringe minority officials are trying to appease.