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The True Spirit of Xmas
Reason.com ^ | December 20, 2004 | Julian Sanchez

Posted on 12/14/2005 2:52:01 PM PST by offtherose

The True Spirit of Xmas How 4/5 of the country became an oppressed minority Julian Sanchez

It's a Christmas tradition as venerable as mistletoe and caroling: As the days grow shorter, conservative activists claiming to speak for American Christendom raise their voices, not for a rousing round of "Good King Wenceslaus," but to complain that the roughly 75 to 80 percent of Americans who profess allegiance to some denomination or another of Christianity constitute a cruelly oppressed minority.

The kvetching is especially loud this year, with a spate of stories chronicling the outrage over a particularly insidious form of anti-Christian bigotry: the Satanic phrase "happy holidays."

National Review's John Derbyshire reports bristling at these two seemingly innocuous words with the sort of fascinated intensity he normally reserves for buggery. There's even a Committee to Save Merry Christmas, urging a boycott of stores that spit on Christians by deploying such bigoted phrases as "happy holidays" or "season's greetings." And in case you thought those phrases were, in our increasingly pluralistic society, just nice ways of creating a festive atmosphere without seeming to exclude the folks celebrating, you know, those other holidays happening around this time, CNN's Lou Dobbs shakes his jowls to remind you that those phrases have "excluded everyone who is celebrating Christmas" (which is apparently neither happy nor a holiday). The Christian Law Association has released a vague list of horror stories under the rhetorical headline: "Has Christmas Become Illegal in America?"

But "Happy Holidays" is just a skirmish in the Axis of Atheism's total war to annihilate Christmas. When the Target chain opted not to make a special exemption for the Salvation Army from its general ban on solicitation, it was tarred as not merely Scrooge-like, but anti-Christian, and deserving of a boycott. Newsweek is ineptly slagged for running an extremely mild piece to the effect that some scholars doubt whether various aspects of the biblical Christmas story could be historically accurate. Even the neutral-sounding phrase "winter break" for the vacation weeks students of various religions are given evokes the specter of the lion pits. If your media diet is largely constrained to Fox News and The Washington Times, it may seem that Bill O'Reilly stands all but alone in having a good word for the holiday amid an "anti-Christmas jihad."

While unusually visible this year, the panic over a War on Christmas is part of a more general persecution complex shared by some conservative Christians, which seems at least as strange as the minority-party style rage evidenced at this summer's Republican National Convention by people who now control every branch of government. While Catholic League honcho William Donohue targeted an old favorite when he complained on MSNBC that "Hollywood is controlled by secular Jews who hate Christianity in general and Catholicism in particular," the favored villain these days appears to be secularism itself—particularly odd in the context of the Christmas issue, since most of those other "happy holidays" are also religious.

Doubtless the faithful face many burdens, but it's probably worth recalling, for perspective's sake, the (almost certainly accurately) conventional wisdom that an open atheist could not be elected to national political office. George Bush the First may not have been quite as voluble about his faith as his prodigal son, but nevertheless he was dissuaded by neither realpolitik nor etiquette from telling one reporter: "I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots."

In order to pull off the sort of grab at victim status conservatives used to deride as a tactic of the left, self-appointed defenders of the faith draw from a cornucopia of bogus anecdotes about oppression. A conservative cause celebre was born when Reuters ran a story under the headline "Declaration of Independence Banned at Calif School" about a teacher forbidden to use that document in classes on the grounds that it mentioned God. It sounds outrageous...and would be, if it were remotely true. It is, of course, not true: The Declaration appears in the school's standard textbooks and hangs on classroom walls. The school's principal, rather, insisted on pre-approving the handouts of a single teacher who had long generated complaints from parents because he was using his American History lessons as a pretext from indoctrination—a teacher who, as one student put it, "talks about Jesus 100 times a day." Judging by this Easter assignment and various other handouts, including fabricated quotations from Founding Fathers on the topic of religion, the concern was well motivated.

Of course, with activists constantly carping that wicked secular humanists have managed to outlaw all religious speech in public schools, it's not terribly surprising that in some instances school administrators who lack a particularly subtle grasp of Supreme Court jurisprudence begin to believe just that and overreach. Seldom mentioned when these cases are cited is the speed with which they tend to be resolved when parents—again, still overwhelmingly Christian in most of the country—get wind of them. Sean Hannity continued to harp on a story about a school removing Christmas music from a student concert well after the rapid reversal of that decision.

Even when genuine cases of religious speech's being squelched lead to a more prolonged battle, the narrative favored by the martyrs manqué doesn't always quite fit. When a Massachusetts high school attempted to punish Bible club members for distributing candy canes with religious messages affixed, Rev. Jerry Falwell justly fumed, but unjustly added: "And yes, students have just as much right to speak on religious topics as they do on secular topics— no matter what the ACLU might propagate." The hitch is that the ACLU successfully defended those very students. One wonders what Falwell makes of the fact that early puritans, regarding Christmas as too pagan and too papist (it's Christ's mass after all), banned its celebration, and that a few contemporary Christians remain sympathetic to that view.

Sometimes, of course, there's a straightforward and cynical explanation of persecution mania. During initial coverage of the murder of Matthew Shepard, widely regarded as an anti-gay hate crime, Today anchor Katie Couric asked a guest to comment on the hypothesis, advanced by some gay activists, that the anti-gay rhetoric of groups like Focus on the Family and the Christian Coalition may have helped to create an atmosphere in which such attacks were more likely. In the wake of recent reporting questioning whether homophobia was the real motive for the murder, Focus on the Family president Don Hodel demanded an apology, seeing Couric's question as evidence of her "anti-Christian agenda." The point of this rhetorical sleight-of-hand is transparent enough: Complaining that your group and your actions have been attacked wins less sympathy and fewer allies than declaring that our shared identity is under assault.

To some extent, the feeling of marginalization may be the result of the very real process of cultural fragmentation. There is probably now as rich and varied a marketplace of Christian media—from Veggie Tales cartoons to the apocalyptic fantasy of the Left Behind series and its spinoffs—as there's ever been. But it's perceived as niche culture, in large part because cultural products are increasingly tailored to niches. As a recent New York Times op-ed notes: "Plain-vanilla Top 40, once the chief vehicle for hit songs, is now the format for only 5 percent of the nation's 10,000-plus stations." A few crossover hits notwithstanding, a young singer who wants to incorporate her faith into her music is now likely to narrowcast to a Christian rock audience because, well, she can. (One apparent exception is hip hop, where alongside lyrical fare that famously drives conservatives to apoplexy, one also finds the likes of the acronymic "Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth" by Wu-Tang Clan's GZA.)

What remains of the mainstream, meanwhile, steers clear of potentially divisive religious themes, not just because American society is gradually becoming more pluralistic in terms of the proportion of Christians to devotees of other faiths, or of none, but because the idea of a monolithic Christian audience is a lot of nonsense, however useful it is to demagogues. Many believers, after all, don't much care for the Left Behind books. Critics of the "Anti Christian Lawyers Union," for that matter, tend to forget that the lead plaintiffs in Abington School District v. Schempp, which barred schools from conducting morning Bible readings, were Unitarians who resented the school's usurpation of their prerogative to teach their children about the Bible in their own way.

So are we really seeing an unprecedented wave of hostility toward either Christmas or Christianity? Or is it, rather, that the waning of the cultural hegemony to which some Christians have come to feel entitled is perceived as an attack? Many of the most loudly trumpeted complaints in this vein are, after all, complaints about the absence of special treatment: no special spot for the Ten Commandments in the courthouse rotunda; no pride of place for Christmas among those happy winter holidays; no exceptions for the Christian charity.

Since "special rights" has been a term of aspersion among conservatives for decades, would-be theocrats have at least the decency to be too ashamed to demand them explicitly. Instead, they've learned the power of the victim narrative, of framing the debate to cast themselves as underdogs. Rather than attempting to entrench their values, demagogues purport to be playing defense against a plot to "purge religion from the public square," trading on the same ambiguity in the word "public" that has eased the acceptance of ever more regulation of privately owned establishments that are open to the public, and allowed for the metastasis of the term "public health," which now apparently covers not just infectious disease control or mosquito abatement, but smoking and obesity. Since the battle is a reactive one against the undifferentiated forces of anti-Christian bigotry, such nice distinctions as that between a business that fails to cater to its customers and an arm of the state adhering to strict neutrality can be dispensed with. More importantly, moderate Christians with no desire to impose their faith on others might be convinced to support a re-Christianization of public life on the premise that they'd only be defending themselves against marauding secularists.

The stratagem is so perverse as to be almost admirable: Take a holiday associated with sentiments like peace and goodwill, mix in some well-intentioned attempts to acknowledge it in an inclusive way suited to a pluralistic society, and then use the combination to generate fear, divisiveness, and high ratings. But whether we're impressed or appalled by that cynical ploy, whether we're gearing up for Christmas dinner or just a post-Ramadan pig-out, we can all breathe a little easier knowing that the anti-Christmas "jihad" is no more real (sorry kids) than Santa Claus. Happy holidays.

Julian Sanchez is Reason's Assistant Editor. He lives in Washington, D.C.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: christians; christmas; happy; holidays; offtherose; offyourmeds; santaslittletroll; war; waronchristmas; zotbait
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To: offtherose

The article's author comes across as being quite hateful.

Not sure why stuff like this gets published at all.


21 posted on 12/14/2005 3:30:33 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: T.Smith
Christian FReepers do seem to get mighty upset about certain things...

I don't consider myself a Cristian, necessarily, but then I don't consider myself not a Christian, so I am ambivalent about the whole religious identity thing. I believe in evolution, but that it is possible that some higher power may exist somewhere.

I have always been as annoyed as heck at the Salvation Army's bellringing noises at the stores around Christmas. I also do not outright boycott stores, but I do shop a lot less at Target than I did before they banned bell ringers.

I support Christianity in general, as long as they don't try to make me join their particular sect, because it teaches morals and values that I as a thinking conservative consider important. Sometimes there may be no rational or logical reason for opposing abortion or supporting the death penalty, except on the basis of faith, and if a faith is going to be needed to help make the right decision, I vote for Christianity.

22 posted on 12/14/2005 3:42:31 PM PST by webheart
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To: right-wingin_It

LOL


23 posted on 12/14/2005 3:55:26 PM PST by Kenny Bunkport
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To: InsureAmerica

I thought that it was widely known by now that that is simply not true- that the X in X-Mas is, indeed, in reference to Christ. It is basically a symbol representative of the cross. This goes back many many years and has been reported in many myth debunking publications.


24 posted on 12/14/2005 5:35:20 PM PST by admiralsn (Friends are just strangers you haven't met yet.)
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To: admiralsn

Admittedly I do not have a plethora of evidence or opinion on this one way or another. A simple question, though. If indeed it is Christmas, why use Xmas?? Is it Christ, or is it X?
I remember as a child, this issue, and it was very much 'frowned upon'. Means nothing more or less than that, I suppose. Probably it all is a function of individual strains of Christianity. I would never write xmas, i would make the extra effort to remove all doubt, add the extra 5 letters, reference Christ, and be done with it.

Apparently it is not widely known. Lots of things are thought to be widely known and actually are not.

Thanks for the opportunity to engage in discourse with you on this. All you have written is considered with respect..


25 posted on 12/14/2005 6:23:51 PM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: admiralsn; All

I feel compelled to add to my last post - in many churches the 'X' is not accepted. As far as your assertions that "it" goes back many years, (From your post: "This goes back many many years and has been reported in many myth debunking publications"), I ask you please to provide 3-4 instances of evidence of this. Provide the names and dates of these publications, if you would please. Many things are reported in myth debunking publications. (philadelphia enquirer comes to mind) For the sake of this discussion, this is wortheless. Please provide, 2-3-4 examples of these publications. If you can do this, then you have the ability to change the perspectives and opinons of others. If you just, as a matter of course, refer to obscure 'things', then you will achieve nothing. I would like the former, rather than the latter, given my proclivity toward learning and understanding about new and unknown 'things'. Please accomodate me. Thanks.


26 posted on 12/14/2005 6:39:31 PM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: InsureAmerica
I think what I intended to say was that the use of the X for X-Mas was used for many years, and only recently was it seen as a sign of "removing the Christ from Christmas." Obviously, people are going to do what they feel is right in their heart. Even after reading the information found at the sites listed below, some will still prefer to write out the word Christ. Absolutely and completely understood. If you write the full word/name "Christ" intending all due respect to Him, someone else may do the same by writing the letter "X." I didn't mean to start anything, as I myself prefer to write out the word "Christ."


I found the following information on various web sites:

http://www.of-worth.com/ea/Christmas.htm#Does%20Xmas%20Take%20Christ%20Out%20of%20Christmas?

http://www.pulseplanet.com/archive/Dec99/2041.html

http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Xmas

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-mas

http://www.juiceenewsdaily.com/1104/news/history_xmas.html?1132372195109

http://www.coffeeswirls.com/archives/2003/12/12/the-meaning-of-xmas/

And from a FR thread from a year ago:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1293598/posts#20

 

27 posted on 12/14/2005 9:10:43 PM PST by admiralsn (Friends are just strangers you haven't met yet.)
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To: admiralsn

Thanks for the links. I'll read more of them time permitting.

So far here is what i've learned:


"In the animated television show Futurama, which is set in the 31st century, Xmas is the official name for the day formerly known as Christmas."



28 posted on 12/15/2005 7:23:40 AM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: InsureAmerica
Well keep reading, there is a little more there than that.

And Merry Christmas to you and yours.

29 posted on 12/15/2005 7:40:52 AM PST by admiralsn (Friends are just strangers you haven't met yet.)
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To: InsureAmerica

There are also those who believe that the word "niggardly" is a racial slur. People have been fired because there are those who say it is a racial slur.

It is not a racial slur, and is really, really believing that it is will not change that fact.


30 posted on 12/15/2005 7:48:37 AM PST by Anitius Severinus Boethius
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To: offtherose
Actually, his fifth and eighth paragraphs (think anyone would chastize a teacher for talking about unions "100 times a day"?) are making the exact point he's trying to denigrate. In addition:
the lead plaintiffs in Abington School District v. Schempp, which barred schools from conducting morning Bible readings, were Unitarians
...making the point.

no pride of place for Christmas among those happy winter holidays
What winter holidays? There's Hannukah and the one made up by a felon specifically to piggyback on Christmas. The problem is that "holiday" is used as a 1-1 replacement for Christmas. Watch a commercial: "What are you going to get her this holiday?" Which holiday? Kwanzaa? I thought only kids got presents during Hannukah. Gift-giving is a specific Christmas thing. There's a reason why the whole thing comes to a head on Dec. 25. We don't have big sales for Veteran's Day, but at least the media isn't afraid to say the word. There's only one holiday and this whole thing was made crystal clear when Lowes advertised "holiday trees". You can argue about many things, but the tree is tied inexorably to Christmas and Christmas alone.

demagogues purport to be playing defense against a plot to "purge religion from the public square,"
...but the author just got done saying that this is exactly what's going on and it's a good thing too.

"Reason" magazine has a very misleading title.

31 posted on 12/15/2005 7:54:38 AM PST by AmishDude (Your corporate slogan could be here! FReepmail me for my confiscatory rates.)
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To: Anitius Severinus Boethius

isn't it amazing to occasionally see a politician or some other 'personality' all teary-eyed in front of the media apologizing or resigning for using 'niggardly'? It is a hoot. What idiocy..


32 posted on 12/15/2005 7:55:32 AM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: T.Smith
Joining FR to post a relevant article does not automatically make one a Troll.

Yes it does.

By definition.

33 posted on 12/15/2005 7:55:53 AM PST by AmishDude (Your corporate slogan could be here! FReepmail me for my confiscatory rates.)
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To: AmishDude

Maybe Xreason would be a better title for the magazine????


34 posted on 12/15/2005 7:59:08 AM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: AmishDude

one can also be accused of being a troll by posting a minority opinion or a provocative opinion. I have never started a thread here yet, but 2 times, I think, based on nothing more than the randomness of the date I joined here and the fact that someone disagreed with my opinion on a topic, I was accused of such. Maybe someone should post the 'Troll Rule', if indeed it has been codified here somewhere.


35 posted on 12/15/2005 8:03:22 AM PST by InsureAmerica (Evil? I have many words for it. We are as dust, to them. - v v putin)
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To: offtherose
To my way of thinking, I had a mother who is a past master at claiming victim status that in America every group wants to feel that they are a victim of another group.

Reply if you think I am wrong but it seems the blue states and red states spend there time counting there own right in a almost miserly fashion screaming that any move by another group is aimed at deleting one or more of there own rights

I guess I don't have as many rights as Americans, but I don rt feel even victimized or oppressed.

LOL Apart from recruit training and I think drill Sargent's go to nasty school just to learn how to victimize and oppress end LOL.

36 posted on 12/15/2005 8:04:16 AM PST by tonycavanagh
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To: InsureAmerica
No, a troll is someone who posts attempting to do nothing more than provoke a response with no intention of an honest discussion. "Trolling for a response." Doing so at the sign-up date is an easy way of doing this because one has no history and no one can judge that the motive is nothing but to tweak the other members of the forum.

A disruptor is something different.

People often confuse the two.

37 posted on 12/15/2005 8:06:52 AM PST by AmishDude (Your corporate slogan could be here! FReepmail me for my confiscatory rates.)
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To: AmishDude

Exactly. Most reasonable Christians aren't saying that there's no room for other celebrations. They're just saying that they don't think that their own traditions need to be watered down, renamed or shuffled aside in order to accomodate others.

It is starting to get a little disturbing, though. Look at how much anti-Christian sentiment has grown just in the last 10 years! People are accusing us of overreacting, but if we don't react now, when something can be done about it, 10 years from now we might look back and wonder why we just sat on our hands. I've heard some stuff about Congress looking at a Christmas Protection Act, or some such thing, as a way to protect our traditions (while still respecting others' traditions, of course). I've already written to them and told them that if they're not thinking of it, they should...I think it would get a lot of support.


38 posted on 12/15/2005 8:57:55 AM PST by HappyMary
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To: gondramB

Canceling subscription to Reason bump...


39 posted on 12/15/2005 8:59:33 AM PST by Prince Charles
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To: Prince Charles

"Canceling subscription to Reason bump..."

Absolutely. They seem to feel a need to exaggerate our concerns in order to belittle them.


40 posted on 12/15/2005 2:56:44 PM PST by gondramB (Rightful liberty is unobstructed action within limits of the equal rights of others.)
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