Posted on 11/28/2014 5:56:51 AM PST by lifeofgrace
My father had a saying which he passed down to me, Im not always right, but Im never wrong. A little more than a week ago, I wrote a post titled Matt Walsh Deserves Black Thanksgiving in which I took apart his arguments for ending early store openings on Thanksgiving day. I did it without mercy and with the spite meter dialed up to eleven. Ive had a change of heart, and I am here to say Im not right. In fact, and not for the first time, I may actually be wrong.
My epiphany happened just last night, after my glorious Thanksgiving feast at my in-laws.
Long story short: I went to Walmart, and there received my enlightening.
It was a baptism in the spirit of mammon, as fiery as the eighth circle of Hell where thieves, hypocrites, and panderers burn.
I wasnt there to shop. I was actually looking for a police officer to bless with a turkey sandwich, some fixings, and dessert goodies. I couldnt find a single police officer on the way home from the in-laws, so I went back out looking for one. I drove around town for a while, spying no officers, although the streets were pretty busy for 7:30pm on Thanksgiving. Two paramedics at a gas station (to whom I offered the food, but theyd eaten) told me all the police were at Walmart. All the police.
And there they were. I counted six patrol cars, parked in various angles all around the curb in front of Super Walmart. Every single spot in the enormous parking lot was taken.
Every. Single. Spot.
It was total insanity.
I had never seen such unrestrained passion for shopping, and Im not without experience. Ive been to IKEA on the first nice Saturday in spring, from which I had to flee due to crowd anxiety after attempting to go against the flow (if youve been to IKEA you know what I mean). Ive been to the Siam Paragon mall in Bangkok just before Christmasin a 99% Buddhist country with more Christmas trees and decorations per square foot than the North Pole. Its a seven story Temple of Retail where they sell everything from frankincense to Ferraris, and it was very crowded.
Those places had nothing on Warner Robins, Georgia (and probably every city in America), on Thanksgiving day, at 7:30pm. And it wasnt just Walmart. TJ Maxx, Best Buy, Bed Bath and Beyond, Kohls, Target, Toys R Us, Belks, and probably others I missed were open for madness, with boxes and clothes literally flying off the shelves and racks.
The experience stunned me. Like an Amish man walking into a crack house, I was overwhelmed.
My only excuse is that I never went Black Friday shopping before. Nope, not ever. I grew up Jewish. We didnt care about Christmas shopping. Hanukkah was not a big shopping deal. A little gelt (money), some chocolate coins, and lighting candles, thats it. When I accepted Christ into my life, I didnt suddenly become a WASP, with all the Gentile traditions, mistletoe, wreaths, and a tree. I guess last night was Gods way of correcting me, kind of like Scrooge and the ghost of Christmas present, except for me it was the reality of Christmas presents gone wild.
Theres no way to describe the scene I saw last night, and I didnt even go into the store, except to say its wickedness. I know thats a powerful word, but really, its wicked to spend hours that you could be happily doing other things with loved ones, lined up like cattle trying to get the last super-Black-Friday discount before someone else snaps it up.
Wickedness: evil, sin, iniquity baseness, badness, degeneracy, depravity, vice; the quality of being evil or morally wrong. What amounts to my citys entire on-duty police department simply keeping order at Walmart because of Black Thanksgiving sales is bad. I dont care if the officers are getting overtime, paid by Walmart. They are not available to work another shift, or they are working a double-shifteither way theyre not their freshest. The shoppers who are up half the night spend half the weekend sleeping it off, then rush to get their Christmas decorations up before theyre the last undecorated house on their street.
When I wrote the argument against Matt Walshs position, I was talking about shopping. You know, the normal experience of going into the store, finding the things you want, and buying them. I realized that hysteria happens at some of these Black Friday shopping events, and even referenced the Walmart incident where a worker was crushed to death by crowds trying to get in. I figured that by opening earlier, the stores would stop that 4am Friday mad rush, and people would take their time and shop normally.
But this is not shopping. This is nothing short of the unbridled spirit of mammon.
Its one thing to want a discount, and go out of your way to shop carefully. Its one thing to have retailers program their sales to entice you to come and shop at a particular time. This isnt either of those things. This is beyond mere tradition of having the day after Thanksgiving off and getting some Christmas shopping done. This is not even strictly consumerism, the urge to buy more and more stuff. People dont buy much more for Christmas now than they did in other years. In fact, spending is down from its peaks in 1999 and 2007, and has finally recovered from last years drop.
What I saw is not consumerism driven by greedy retailers. Consumerism means the theory that an increasing consumption of goods is economically desirable, also; a preoccupation with and an inclination toward the buying of consumer goods. Neither definition really fits Black Thanksgiving; one is disproved, and the other is insufficient. Many of the retailers open ten years ago are bankrupt today (remember Circuit City?). Retailers who stay closed on Thanksgiving are doing a great service to their employees now, but are risking massive profits, even their survival, long term. In short, theres tremendous pressure on retailers to keep up with the trend, and open earlier and earlier. Shoppers dont seem to mind going out on Thanksgiving Day to shop.
Despite protests from religious and family-oriented special interest groups, the U.S. retail industry 2013 Thanksgiving Day sales results revealed that shoppers weren't as concerned about messing up their Thanksgiving Day traditions as they were about missing a deeply discounted Thanksgiving Day deal. It was estimated that more than 1.07 billion visits were made to brick-and-mortar retail stores on Thanksgiving Day, November 28, 2013, and that consumer purchases on Thanksgiving Day 2013 increased 23.7%, year-over-year.Looking solely at the numbers, and jobs, and the economy, and freedom of choice, theres no reason to oppose Black Thanksgiving sales, and that was my position before seeing the reality of wickedness and insanity. The reality showed me that the problem has very little to do with numbers. In fact, I believe stores could raise their prices 30% a week before Thanksgiving, and then sell half the items at 50% off and the rest at 20% off, and still sell everything on the shelves. Some of them probably do this. The problem defies rational thought, because its a of a spiritual nature.
The frenzy of shopping I saw was akin to what happened on November 11, 1987 when the rock band U2 announced a spontaneous free concert at Justin Herman Plaza in San Francisco. Twenty thousand people gathered in just minutes to hear them perform. Those fans were calm and patient compared to Black Thanksgiving shoppers.
I am absolutely convinced that people would gather in frenzy no matter when the stores opened, because the frenzy is what they crave. Its the one time of year when normally sane people who mostly spend their time and money wisely can abandon themselves to an orgy of mammon worship. The only thing preventing the frenzy from happening before Thanksgiving Day is the fact that most people have to work (that plus having to cook for the Thanksgiving meal). If companies started giving employees the Wednesday before Thanksgiving off, then Black Wednesday would start a three-day bender of binge shopping. Five days if you count the weekend, and of course you have to count the weekend.
Listen, people. Its not acceptable to binge shop. Its not right to submit yourself to an orgy of mammon worship. Its wickedness. Sure, I know Im sounding like Billy Sunday preaching against the evils of alcohol, but that doesnt make binge drinking good, and it doesnt make me wrong about this.
I cant conceive of this being fun. Finding one parking spot in a sea of cars, walking to the overcrowded Walmart, entering an infestation of frenzied shoppers all looking for one incredible bargain, fighting over the last 60 flat screen TV, filling your cart with other stuff that you could simply order online, while you tweet about it, then heading for the line at the checkout which would put the TSA at Atlanta airport to shame; this is not fun. Its group hysteria and spiritual darkness.
Retailers have turned the atmosphere into a circus, and we are the clowns. I dont blame the retailers, because they are just responding to our urges, our abandon of good and wise choices, in favor of this spirit of mammon.
I was wrong about Black Thanksgiving. All my arguments were correct, but I was so wrong because I totally missed the picture. If youre caught up in the frenzy, think about it. Is it really necessary? Is it really good? Do you need this? In a twelve-step program, like AA, the first step is admitting you have a problem. America has a problem with Black Friday, and Black Thanksgiving, and frenzied binge shopping at Christmastime.
Its time we face up to it. I hate admitting Im wrong, but this time, it really feels right.
We allow ourselves to drift to the next level thinking there is nothing wrong with it. We have nothing in us anymore to draw a line. We continue to buy the mockery of the puritan. That somewhere someone might be having some fun. All we want is fun for ourselves. We have no desire to show or teach the next generation, we only want our fun and fall for the next thing offered.
He didn’t go in. He should have. Then he would have had some real stories to tell. They called out the police to break up the riot in a Walmart in Houston.
He makes some really good points.
I could not agree more and specifically plan things for my family to stay around the house and play games, visit with invited guests, etc. I cannot imagine having to deal with that.
And I LOVE the Billy Sunday reference. Never got to see or hear him preach, but have read about his sermons in numerous books.
Two years ago, we went to Walmart after dinner - only because our guests all left right after dinner to go there, leaving Mr sneakers and I looking at each other somewhat stunned. Why did they all leave? To go shopping?? On Thanksgiving??
Well, we went too. It was a horrible experience. The store was packed, shoulder to shoulder. We were like cattle. The only thing we could do was go along with the herd. It was the most ridiculous thing we ever witnessed. Well, that was the first and last time to ever do that. Now, we go to SIL’s where everybody stays after dinner and we have a wonderful time enjoying each other’s company. Mr S and I went out this morning (Official Black Friday). No crowds, no pushing, no rudeness, no fighting for ‘stuff’. Even the staff at the stores we went to were friendly. They were not under pressure. It was a much more pleasant experience!
He’s 100% right. It is a reflection of who we are now, a society utterly unconcerned with God.
Our culture is a putrid cesspool of wickedness.
Concur. I wouldn't be caught dead shopping in that sea of unwashed humanity.
Oh my gosh! Warner Robins mention! (I’m easily amused, ok?!)
We’re famous!
I trekked through the woods to the state park and had the lake to myself this morning. Well, except for whomever made the deer tracks in the snow. Not even a single Muffy or Biff driving in to walk their golden retrievers. Glorious.
Not me, neighbor. The annual "door-buster" orgy never has been my cup of tea. I can recall close relatives looking more toward Black Friday, with an ambiguous mix of dread and a gambler's rush, than Thanksgiving. But the appeal of discounts at the price of crushing crowds has never been sold to me as a bargain. I think I'd rather have my gums scraped.
Never have I seen the appeal. As to the encroachment of these sales on the national holiday, I'm not happy with there no longer being a distinct line, and at midnight, between the two events. I wouldn't go anywhere near a Wal-Mart or a Mall for one of these events, and I don't like the subversive quality on every possible kind of family and community of increasingly not allowing employees the same kind of fellowship.
Maybe an attack on another side of retailing having as close an interest in the Holiday could bring their fellow retailers back behind a proper line.
Proclaim the Thanksgiving Day holiday as a fast rather than a feast.
My participation in these events is zero. I don’t even get close to them. I meant ‘we’ in the collective sense as a society.
He didn’t say what he did with the turkey sandwiches......
I think most people’s imaginations could tell them what shopping on Thanksgiving would be like without actually going there to experience it. No thanks - never have and never will.
We didn’t have the same father but I always said something similar - “I may not always be right but I’m hardly ever wrong.” Drove coworkers nuts but I didn’t feel sorry for them. It was what I said when they complained they couldn’t find a file (the really old days) and after I’d tell them where it was, they still couldn’t find it and I’d pick it up from exactly where I told them and hand it to them. Funny but that carried through with kids and a husband too!
“”Gave them to a police officer at Walmart.””
He said he found six patrol cars parked at Walmart and then took off with the rest of his story. I missed it if he said he gave it/them to the officers.
It wasn’t in the story, but I gave the food to a police officer at Walmart. —ME, as in the author.
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