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The Real Christmas Wars
Crossposted at Right Minds
Christopher Hitchens, who is (I think) often wrong but always interesting, just wrote a column bashing Christmas, which is apparently an annual practice for him. (Hitchens makes Scrooge look like Santa Claus). I think Hitchens is overreacting a little—Christmas carols are annoying, perhaps, but it’s a stretch to compare their ubiquity to fascist propaganda, or to say that the “United States—a country constitutionally based on a separation between church and state—turns itself into the cultural and commercial equivalent of a one-party state,” like pretty soon they’ll start clapping people who aren’t enthusiastic enough about Christmas into irons and force them to listen to “Jingle Bells" for hours on end.
It’s not really hard to see the weak point in Hitchens’ argument—the government is hardly the primary celebrator of Christmas—rather, Christmas’ massive popularity is more a creation of corporations concocting an excuse for consumers to buy massive amounts of stuff. And any separation of church and state obviously wouldn’t apply to either the “cultural” or “commercial” sectors, which should alleviate fears of a “one-party state.” Anyway, the “separation of church and state” isn’t in the Constitution, so Hitchens can rest easy.
Hysteria aside, though, Hitchens does have a point. Christmas really has become an aesthetic nightmare—awful pop renditions of Christmas carols, the painful commercialization of Christmas, and the constant attempts to extend the holiday beyond Christian consumers combine to make the Christmas season something of a nightmare. Not Hitchens’ fascist orgy, of course. But Christmas has just become tacky.
For a time, it seemed that large stores tried to stay away from religious Christmas songs, preferring to play new covers of “Rudolph” and “Frosty the Snowman.” Of course, these songs were usually terrible—most Christmas carols aren’t improved by being set to pop music. Then people realized that religious songs didn’t really offend anyone—and that was worse. If “Frosty the Snowman” set to a steel guitar is bad, “Silent Night” set to the same instrument is far, far worse.
It’s become a cliché to criticize the commercialization of Christmas, but such complaints are still valid. It’s ironic that the birth of One who advocated poverty and self-restraint should be marked by an orgy of consumption. It’s unavoidable, of course—were Christmas to disappear, sellers would find another excuse for people to shop (maybe Thanksgiving? Give people something to be thankful for?). Still, the irony is there.
But by far the most annoying and tacky element of Christmas is the constant attempts to market the holiday to all cultures. This always fails—on two fronts. First, the generic “holiday” is always represented with traditional Christian elements such as Christmas trees, so I doubt that many of other cultures feel very included. And given that all “holiday” commercials, celebrations, and the like always stop right on Christmas Day, the commitment to other cultures looks pretty shallow.
And the embarrassment about invoking Christianity also rankles. There’s nothing wrong with stores trying to attract a wide range of customers—in fact, that’s a good thing, and they really have to if they want to stay in business. But there does seem to be something amiss when businesses feel that they can’t even mention the word “Christmas,” as though that will drive people away in droves. Over eighty percent of Americans are Christians—saying “Merry Christmas” welcomes a lot more people than it repels.
And if you’re worried that “Merry Christmas” will offend people—if “Merry Christmas” has the power to offend someone, that person probably has problems that require a lot more than “Happy Holidays” to fix.
Worst of all, though, is the awful disrespect towards other cultures that leads people to think that they can group other cultures’ holidays with Christmas. There are two other major holidays near Christmas—Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. And trying to include Jews in a comprehensive “Happy Holidays” is incalculably insulting; trying to include blacks with that phrase is just stupid.
I’m not Jewish, but I know enough about the religion to know that Hanukkah is an important holiday in that tradition—and absolutely nothing like Christmas. Hanukkah is not simply the Jewish version of Christmas, and trying to pass it off as an excuse for Jews to join the Christmas fun is simply insulting.
And Kwanzaa isn’t really a holiday at all—Ron Karenga invented it forty years ago as a black alternative to Christmas. And the notion that blacks need their own special Christmas makes our treatment of Hanukkah look respectful in comparison.
For all its flaws, Christmas is still a wonderful holiday. It may be tacky—but its good points far outweigh the annoying.


Comments
My Christmas gift to you
is the paragraph mark - ¶.
The War on Christmas is retarded
Both from anyone on the Left who supports it, and those on the Right who think that the vast majority of Lefties support it.
I'm a frigging leftie atheist and I have no problem with Christmas songs in stores, or anything like that.
That said, stores have the freedom to market their product however they wish, and they should be able to, free from government influence.
Your knowledge of my religion is WORSE than WIkipedia.
Your ignorance and your boldness in posting uninformed lies is disgraceful. Please correct your story.
I live in your mostly christian country, so I guess I get looked at strangely if I don't know things like what exactly Easter is about. So I learn.
But do you bother to even consult wikipedia about Chanukka? No.
quoting wiki:
Chanukah has been butchered almost as badly as Christmas, which of course doesn't occur when Christ was actually born, but was timed to coincide with Saturnalia, a Pagan Roman Holiday. It used to be traditional to just give kids a few coins... not a gift every night! My parents remember getting one gift for Hanukkah, but back in the old country, it wasn't a crazy thing that people would spend gobs of money for a menorah on...
If you want to make my day, you can wish me a Happy New Year on Rosh Hashanah. It's far more appropriate than trying to make Hanukah into an important holiday simply because it fits your need for a Winter Holiday.
Man, reading the court decisions on this stuff is weird.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/County_of_Allegheny_v._ACLU
Yo Saturnalia! And I wish you all a very merry yule!
Hanukkah vs Christmas
That comment is a little incoherent, but I think your point is that Hanukkah isn't all that important. I would think that's debatable, given that "Hanukkah has taken a place equal to Passover as a symbol of Jewish identity" and all, but still, it's important enough, I think, to be more than just the Jewish version of Christmas.
FYI
Positivistic materialism has been thoroughly refuted; thus, your arguments fall short.
ref: Ouspensky
Granted, I love the writings of Spencer; but these oppositional adornments are untoward and ephemeral.
huckabee obvious counterexample.
(seriously, I am very much out of my depth here, and teh google isn't helping too much. With Outspensky, are you referring to his FourthWay?)
I'm much more comfortable discussing the philosophical ramifications of subatomic particles (yes, seriously).
Refering to noumena
Even Spencer conceded the limitations of materialism.
allow me to put on the psychologist hat for a moment.
if concepts are localizable to the same place as phenomena, and appear to use the same neuronal pathways (you want the studies? i'll give you the studies...), I think we can be confident that they are material representations that are founded on the phenomena, and not vice versa (I'll take the example of speech, which we know is not an innate human thing, because children who do not learn speech at a young age are incapable of learning it later.)
I categorically refuse to say that there are innate concepts like good and evil. But I think by this point I'm bitching against absolute morality (as opposed to relative morality). Which is probably not your point. (follow up if you're interested)
hope the science helps.
thanks for something googleable!
Then....
you would be half-right.
I don't know when Rosh Hashanah is!
I'll have to atone on Yom Kippur... if I can remember what that day is.. meshuggeh!
Be a mensch and forgive this putz? Think of it as a mitzvah. :D
you can generally tell when the Days of Awe are
because me and all the other Jews will apologize to everyone they meet (I put up an "I'm sorry for everything and anything" on kos and mydd last year. a lot of other folks do too). That is, if you don't catch the Daily Show and the Colbert Report, both of which have many Jewish writers who love an excuse to write Jewish jokes.
Shh! a very little known secret is that Wikipedia (and most calendars) list when Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are. And don't sweat it if you wish me a happy new year a day or two late. While it's not the chinese new year, which lasts a while, the days of awe are the period between when god opens the book of life and closes it. So wishing me a happy new year is a good thing then (because god might not put my name in the book of life, and then I wouldn't be around much after that).
btw, putz is a really bad swear word. just an fyi (like i've got any rope to complain about folks using yiddish swear words!). definitely not something to use around bubbes (grandmothers).
I had no idea putz was serious :)
I think it's too late to amend my ways though... I use the word far too often! I'd like to think that since I'm not religious, I can play off my ignorance.
Nice work, putz
I like your style.
My Christmas gift to all...
ex animo
davidfarrar