So presumably we liberals have declared war on Christmas. Funny, I missed the memo. Iâve gone back and checked every e-mail from moveon.org and the Center for American Progress for the past six months. Not one about Christmas. Or should I say, âThe Holidaysâ?
How can you wage a war if you donât inform your troops? Here Iâve just been cruising around since Thanksgiving, smiling whenever someone offered me a âMerry Christmasâ greeting even though Iâm not a Christian, and even though Christmas is many days away. Apparently I am not doing my liberal job; I should demand that these nice people bid me the politically correct âHappy Holidaysâ and rebuke them for trying to impose their religion on society.
I know, we liberals donât have enough really important issues to worry about. There just arenât that many hungry people, Americans without health care, threats to the environment or mega-corporations destroying free markets. With everything going so well â as President Bush keeps telling us â thereâs only one thing left for us liberals to do: Take Christ out of Christmas.
The lesson of Christmas vs. Happy Holidays is that one should never underestimate the ingenuity of the American advocacy industry. With no Terri Schiavo lingering in a comatose state, where can Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson and their pseudo-pious opportunists find a better publicity â aka fundraising â opportunity? Sure, attack Wal-Mart and Target for not commercializing Christ. Makes sense to me.
In a way, itâs hard to blame the Falwell Frauds for making a federal case of how we express good wishes to each other. They know the American news media is ready and willing to elevate the âWar on Christmasâ to a life-and-death proposition. Even though there arenât nearly as many interesting visuals to display, a war is a war, and a victim is a victim. And by golly, if the victim is the countryâs most important holiday, the news shows can use this non-controversy to fill five minutes an hour every day, at least until another pretty girl is missing on a tropical island.
Fortunately, most everybody I know doesnât seem to take this national emergency as seriously as Falwell and Bill OâReilly, who for once in his life was accurate when he said this whole thing was insane. Of course, he thinks it is insane that some people choose to say âHappy Holidaysâ instead of âMerry Christmas,â but at least he came up with the right word to describe the alleged war on Christmas.
By way of background, the whole episode seems to have begun when U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert proclaimed that the tree outside the U.S. Capitol would be called a âChristmas Treeâ rather than a âHoliday Tree.â Far as I can tell, not one person made a big deal out of this name change except the religious exploiters who saw another chance to cry about how the nationâs majority religion is being discriminated against. This is a logical impossibility, I believe, but one that is constantly used to generate more contributions and votes from radical religious interests.
The strangest thing about the whole brouhaha is that Falwell and the other nuts decided to pick a fight after the other side (if there actually is another side) surrendered. With few exceptions, everybody who was asked said they didnât care what anybody called the tree. Louisvilleâs Jewish mayor Jerry Abramson had it absolutely right when he said, âPeople can call the tree whatever they want.â
Well, Mr. Falwell and Mr. OâReilly, as one of those devilish liberals, I believe any tree that is decorated at this time of year should be called a âChristmasâ tree, because thereâs nothing in other religious traditions that mandates decorated trees. I would think most non-Christians would object to the implication that they are subsuming their religious identities to yours.
Like many Christians and non-Christians, I am one of those people who have decorated trees in their houses because they like the spirit of a holiday season that focuses on goodwill toward people of all faiths and ideologies, and not because they think a tree with lights and candy canes has some spiritual significance.
We liberals and other members of the sane majority know there is nothing holy about the American holiday season except what goes on in the hearts of the devout.
We know that 99 percent of all seasonâs greetings, whether they be âHappy Holidaysâ or âMerry Christmas,â are simply people being friendly to each other.
We know that people say âHappy Holidaysâ not because they are trying to take Christ out of Christmas, but because it doesnât make sense to say Merry Christmas when it is only one day and it is a month away.
We suspect Falwell, OâReilly and company have too many sugarplums dancing in their heads.
Contact the writer at jyarmuth@aol.com
This article appears in January 1, 2006.
