Now,
Y’all Hear This: A Merry Christmas, Everyone!
by
Tom White
by Tom White
There has been
a lot of flurrying around on the Internet this onrushing Christmas
season about the strange suppression of the word "Christmas"
in connection with the upcoming "Holidays." A good many
Christian groups are up in arms about it, and even CNN has noticed
there is something spooky going on. Their Paula Zahn did a prime-time
segment around the first of this month that pitted The Rev. J. Falwell
against Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League to talk about the
diminishing-to-zero mentions of Christmas and the increasing substitution
for it of the generic "Holidays" in the public discourse editorial,
commercial, and musical in the media.
The Rev. F.
was outraged by what he saw as selective bigotry in the suppression
of Christian symbols displays, carols, and the like and Brother
Abe, defending the status quo, raised once again the specter of
a takeover of America by crazed fundamentalist Christians, who would
of course, in his view, be flaming anti-Semites of the most rabid
kind.
The most interesting
thing about the Zahn segment was that it happened at all. A lot
of media notice is apt to lessen the smoothness of the elimination
of "Christmas" from ads, print and television, from store
signage, from greeting cards, and not least from the greetings store
clerks are trained to give. The thing is now so universal as to
make it almost startling if someone breaks stride and says a "Merry
Christmas." And it was even a bit surprising to see CNN taking
it up as a newsworthy happening worth dragging in some "experts"
to discuss. The experts were duly consulted, and the show ended
with everything about as it was: Christmas still on the way out,
Holidays very much on the way in. I’ll be monitoring this in a thoroughly
casual and non-encyclopedic way as the day approaches.
The Rev. Donald
Wildmon’s American Family Association has been collecting statistics
on the "suppression of Christmas," and calling for boycotts.
I noticed one directed at Target, which was partially rescinded
when a Target spokesperson said they would work some Christmas language
into promotions later in the shopping season.
An outfit called
the Catholic League has been doing something along the same lines.
Their campaign against a rather dull-witted statement by one Lands
End spokesperson has just ended with a retraction of said statement
and an apology from another one.
I expect there
is a lot of similar action around the country. The opposition is
spotty; the get-rid-of-Christmas program seems to be rolling along
almost automatically. The bottom-line sentiment that seems to have
got itself installed in most of us by what I have to suppose is
some pretty clever brainwashing is the feeling that "Merry
Christmas," however wonderful and traditional, has built into
it a potential to offend, whereas "Happy Holidays" simply
does not. Except, now that I think of it, it does a little offend
me. But I don’t think I’m ever counted in the polls.
I have had
the idea of going around a few days before the Big Day issuing Merry
Christmases to all and sundry in a loud stage voice, but I fear
that would be to call attention to oneself as a rebel, a trouble-maker,
perhaps someone the Patriot Act should be invoked against, a troublesome
sort of non-conformist, the sort of person one really must disapprove
of.
I was musing
on such thoughts as these, and realizing that I am simply unwilling
to mount the barricades on this one as somehow too silly by half,
but also noting that I am aware that a very serious insult is being
delivered to the majority Christian population of the land. It is
an insult that cannot be much addressed without seeming to be a
shrill sort of carper, that is, someone along the lines of the Rev.
Falwell, who, forgive me, is not my idea of proper priestly parson
person.
I happened
to just reread something that came in recently as a Mises Daily
[email] Article, "The Socialist Calumny Against the Jews."
It was written in 1944. In it Mises writes about the Nazis, the
Soviets and their relation to religion in general. Mises makes the
interesting point that Hitler did not go after Christianity as a
religion (although I think some lesser Nazis did). What Hitler and
his theory of government ("totalitarian" through and through)
could not abide was "the Christian churches as autonomous establishments
and independent agencies . . . totalitarianism cannot tolerate the
existence of any institution not completely subject to the . . .
[the government’s] sovereignty. . . . The separation of church
and state is contrary to the principles of totalitarianism [emphasis
mine).
There is a
tremendous clue here. We slide ever more into the totalitarian condition
ourselves, which means we cannot continue to have very much longer
what everybody claims to be fighting for: separation of church and
state. We are going to need to get more "total." The totalitarian
state insists on essential unanimity. The U.S.S.R. had its Marxism;
the Nazis had their swastika flags, Nuremburg rallies, Heil Hitlers,
and dedication to Der Vaterland. We have autos, shopping,
"entertainment," easy sex, shopping again, and I suppose
football or at least televised sports. Anyway, however you describe
the American thing, the odd-thing-out in the mix is any sort of
religion or religious group that seriously claims independence or
is too insistent on its signal icon. What you sense in all this
"Holidays" hoopla is that much mention of Christ is in
dreadfully bad taste, really a party-pooper.
I think few
will deny that is what is going on. As the government comes to rule
and regulate in all things, our rulers simply cannot continue to
permit giant public fiestas, however profitable to the merchants,
that point to a figure so notoriously independent of government
and even rather scornful of it. And government needs to bring the
"independent" churches into a condition as near to total
subservience as can be managed, and as quickly as it can be managed.
In this connection consider how many churchpeople of all varieties
either support the present war or say nothing about it. They are,
as it were, already pre-cowed.
I see two things
slowing up our anti-Christian government’s achieving a smooth transition
of Christmas into a secular, year-end Solstice Saturnalia, aka "Holidays."
One is the continued hollering by some Christians that they are
being discriminated against, as, after some fashion, they indeed
are. And the other is the gloom that will settle in among the merchants
when they see that a secular holiday doesn’t deliver the customers
the way good old jolly Christmas used to.
Look at it.
Secular, state-sanctioned holidays are nothings: does Hallmark do
cards for Labor Day, Fourth of July, Armistice Day, Martin Luther
King Day, Presidents Day, etc.? But consider the real retail-sales
barnburners all religious in origin if a bit tacky in execution
these days: Christmas, New Year’s, St. Valentine’ Day, St, Patrick’s
Day, Halloween. Have I overlooked any? Yes, Columbus Day, but that
has triggered a terrible quarrel over the European conquest of the
Americas, so Cristoforo (there’s that bad word again) will have
to wait a bit for rehabilitation, and anyway maybe it wasn’t really
a religious fiesta after all, since Columbo, unlike Patrick, was
not a saint.
I may be back
soon with more news on this front; then again I may decide the whole
thing isn’t worth the trouble. So far no one is denying us the right
to greet the Lord on his nativity in our homes and churches. It’s
interesting that Wal-Mart translates "Holidays" into Spanish
as "La Navidad." Evidently it’s harder to be P.C.
in Spanish.
December
12, 2005
Tom
White [send him mail]
writes from Odessa, Texas. He is the author of Bill
W., A Different Kind of Hero: The Story of Alcoholics Anonymous
(2003),
and the newly-published Lost
in the Texas Desert.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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