Posted on 11/17/2014 4:04:01 AM PST by lifeofgrace
Matt Walsh takes on Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving 1, Matt 0. Heres the play by play.
Matt says that stores like Macys, J.C. Penney, Best Buy, Kohls, Sears and Target (he calls them godless, anti-American) have ruined Thanksgiving by moving their opening times to Thursday afternoon versus the traditional Black Friday midnight madness. He further sins by mistaking J.C. Penney as J.C. Pennys, only proving further that in the halls of retail Valhalla, Matt really belongs in Helheim. The man obviously doesnt know his cufflinks from his garters.
He reserves his special venom for Kmart (who owns Sears), which will keep its stores open all day Thanksgiving. And for people who pride themselves on being the first living beings not wearing blue golf shirts to enter a Best Buy for the big sale--two women are camping out for 22 days. In Vegas. Anything can happen in Vegas. Matt compares a 7-11 in Podunk to a Best Buy in Vegas. Cmon, Matt, everything is larger than life in Vegas, so get off their case and let what happens in Vegas, stay in Vegas.
But seriously, Matts point is that this ever-earlier opening for after-now-during-Thanksgiving sales is evidence of out-of-control consumerism. Like somehow gluttony and buying sprees of the filthy rich are related to the mom who wants a Frozen Sparkle Elsa doll and to pay less than $25 for it. Or the guy who wants a new 60 TV to watch football without paying $900. These are just people who want a bargain, because money is scarce these days. Not everyone is up for a 4am shopping trip to Walmart, where in 2008 a mob of 2,000 crushed Jdimytai Damour to death. Hey Matt, a leisurely stroll to Target or Kmart at 6pm might save a few lives.
Matt spends 407 words railing against people buying stuff.
We need you to buy. We dont need you to be a human, we dont need you to be a citizen, we dont need you to be a capitalist, we just need you to be a consumer, a buyer. If you are alive you must buy. Buy like you breathe, only more frequently.Outside of the reality-denial zone in Matts bedroom, or his porch, or wherever he spends his time writing unshaven in his fuzzy slippers and Hershey-kiss boxers, the days between Black Friday and Christmas are the most important retail days of the whole year. Entire stores, companies, and product lines are made or broken in that short 27-day frenzy. And poor Matt complains about six hours, because its about buying stuff, and interrupting his beer-drinking, football-watching, nap-taking, turkey-stuffed evening.
Heres what the people who run the stores, and pay the people who work there, think.
According to [America's Research Groups] research, if a customer enters a retailer's store for its Black Friday sales, there's a 70 percent chance they will return two or three more times during the Christmas season. If they don't walk into a particular store in those beginning days, there's a 30 percent chance they won't come at all that season.People shop on Black Friday for one big, neon-lit reason: 50% off. I realize that Matt likes to pay full price for everything, because he must be made of money, and uses real money for his $100 bill toilet paper. But the rest of Murica isnt flushing cash down the commode, so we have to get our sorry butts down to the store when the discounts are offered."If you look at the last six Christmases, the retailers who have won the early-bird-special war have won the Christmas war," [Britt Beemer, chairman] said.
Not that were buying the stuff for ourselves, anyway. See, theres this day, it happens every year on December 25, when we get up early, run down the stairs, or down the hall, and lo and behold, theres a stack of things under a lighted tree in our living rooms. These things are shiny, wrapped, and theyre called gifts. People buy them for us, because thats what we do on Christmas. Matt obviously needs a lesson in American traditions and Christian holidays, because he doesnt know that all that stuff were buying on Black Friday is given away just 27 days later.
But thats not the real beef Matt has with shopping on Thanksgiving. Nope. He goes all religious on us, saying that Black Friday desecrates the spirit of Thanksgiving. That somehow in the middle of the blessing over the meal, people will break for the door to get to Walmart.
Bless us, O Lord, and these thy gifts yadda yadda gotta go, Walmart opens in ten minutes!And when has it been different? How about Bless us, O Lord, and these thy gifts oh my God, did you see that tackle? Football cannot possibly desecrate a holiday dedicated to God and His blessings, but shopping can. And now we get down to the biggest bee in Matts bonnet: that employees at these retail outlets have to work on Thanksgiving so that we can shop. Yes, there it is, Matt Walsh, the workers friend.
Now Im going to speak to Matt directly. Read this carefully, Matt. Hover over each syllable. Move your lips if you have to, but I know youre smart enough to get this. Retail workers working on Thanksgiving is no worse than any other worker working on Thanksgiving.
Blasphemy! Sacrilege!
Matt, while youre sitting there sipping your beer and munching on turkey, whether Kmart was open or not, thousands of people would be working on Thanksgiving. Hundreds of restaurantsopen for business. Where do you think people who dont slave over a hot oven for five hours eat their turkey dinner? A quick check on OpenTable (fine dining) shows 7 restaurants in Silver Spring, MD, your stomping grounds, with no availability at 7pm. It seems that people have reserved all the tables. On Thanksgiving Day! Two other restaurants have a table, if you want it. Better act fast, because theyll probably be gone soon.
I guess, Matt, you can call out Americans fascination with dining out, and our attachment to food, food, food, and our gluttony, and our large portions, and our overweight, face-stuffing culture. You can relate that to Thanksgiving, and call it Fat Thursday, because many families have their tradition by going out to eat instead of making their mothers and wives cook for three days so they can skeletonize a turkey carcass in an hour like a school of famished piranha descending on an unfortunate victim.
You can go back to traditional gender roles, where a womans place is in the kitchen, roasting a turkey to perfection, while the man of the house sharpens his electric carving knife, ready to flawlessly dissect the drumstick from the thigh and serve his perfect family while they sit with their hands folded neatly on their laps, heads bowed in thankfulness and prayer.
But you cant help noticing that many families dont have Dad at the head of the table. Thats because Dad (or Mom) is a police officer, a firefighter, a paramedic, a doctor, or a nurse. These people have to work on Thanksgiving, because crime, fires, and sickness dont take a day off. Then there are the families where the father or brother or sister isnt there because they are off fighting someones war, or on a ship at sea, or wearing the uniform of our armed forces somewhere far away. Wars dont honor our holidays either.
Matt, we wont even mention the football players, the traditional game, that the Detroit Lions always play, who have to work on Thanksgiving. And its not just the 22 men on the field: trainers, coaches, bus drivers, concession stand cashiers, cooks, referees, cameramen, reporters, photographers, sports anchors, master control operators, directors, and technicians also have to work on Thanksgiving. They are not at home sipping beer and eating turkey. And nobodys getting all bunched up in the pantyhose over their work conditions.
The weather man on TV, the air traffic controllers dealing with flights and the busiest travel days of the year, pilots, mechanics, flight attendants, ticket counter people, gate attendants, and even the hapless TSA screeners. They all have to work on Black Thanksgiving, and they dont even have the option of going to Walmart to get the big TV at 50% off.
Matt, the size of your hypocrisy is poking out of your now-too-small shirt. Youve eaten too much of your own cooking and its made you intellectually fat. You say Thanksgiving is just a holiday but stuff, things, toys, gadgets is what life is about. Youre being sarcastic of course, but really youre being mean.
People deserve to shop if they want to, just as much as they deserve to watch football, drink beer, and eat turkey. In the end, someones got to do the job. I applaud the companies that give their employees the day off, especially the retail companies you mentioned. Its great to have the family at home. But until you also give the other people who work on Thanksgiving, sometimes year after year, a break, youre just talking turkey.
Matt, you deserve your Black Thanksgiving, and I hope you enjoy it knowing how many people it took for you to take a day off. Maybe you should deport yourself. Im sure theres plenty of people who would volunteer to fly you theresomewhere, anywhere but here.
Oh dear. It sounds like Blogger B is insanely jealous of Blogger A’s much larger readership.
Kind of makes Walsh's point, doesn't it? It's about consumerism.
Just started reading Walsh’s stuff and wish I had found him sooner.
Blogger B using Blogger A’s name as the first two words in his title is a rather large clue. Blogger B understands that no one is searching for articles bearing his own name.
Clever, Blogger B. Very clever.
Our family doesn’t go anywhere near shopping centers or malls on Black Friday, and we have always assumed that everything is closed on Thanksgiving Day.
However, considering that so many Americans no longer seem to have any regard for God or His blessings on this country and those who live here, it is probably right and proper for the stores to be open. In fact, I am close to suggesting that those who do not believe that we owe any thanks to God work through the holiday whatever your occupation. What are you celebrating?
Also, if you don’t get the people in the store during this time of year, the store might not be there next year. Lots of stores close because of bad Christmas seasons in the last 10 years.
It isn’t that... some people who got jobs HAVE to be working that day. My oldest son’s friend got to work at Wal-Mart that day. He is 16 but since his dad got laid off, he helps with his job. His mom works at Best Buy and she is working, too.yh
It isn’t that... some people who got jobs HAVE to be working that day. My oldest son’s friend got to work at Wal-Mart that day. He is 16 but since his dad got laid off, he helps with his job. His mom works at Best Buy and she is working, too.yh
This was needlessly snippy. I agree. I won’t shop on Thanksgiving, just to save a few bucks, there’s a line, and for me, that one is it.
And why should they not?!
Writers may sometimes use it, but this writer hasn’t.
Or, more accurately, if he’s tried, he’s failed.
This is a juvenile nyah nyah nyah rejoinder offering nothing more than the status quo as a so-called rebuttal.
Sometimes I think the argument about shopping on Thanksgiving is an opportunity for a lot of people to show off their superior love of family. This guy made a good point about people pushing away from the table and heading to the TV to watch hours of football. Personally I don’t watch football but I do enjoy shopping. What is the difference between certain family members spending most of the day watching football together and some family members shopping together?
Or we need to go out because of big sales?
Or because watching football at home with family is the same as scattering to the four winds to go shopping?
The author is an idiot. Give thanks. Stay home. Eat. Enjoy family. Above all, take this one day to show thanks to God and those you love. Is one day too much to ask for?
Just because things are on sale and stores will be open, that doesn't mean that you have to blindly drag yourself away from family and God to partake of the retail experience.
You just illustrated perfectly the example of “I am a superior lover of family and God” because I don’t shop on Thanksgiving LOL!
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