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Topic: Why Are You Here, Again?, Whose holiday is this, anyway?< Next Oldest | Next Newest >
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PostIcon Posted on: Dec. 22 2009,12:16 pm  Skip to the next post in this topic. Ignore posts   QUOTE

Why are all the non-Christians out buying up Wal-Crap by the SUV-load this time of year?

I doubt all of you still worrying about Christmas presents and the like have accepted Jesus the Christ as your personal Lord and Saviour, so I ask you: Why are you here, running around in search of bric-a-brac for Aunt Jeanette, planning parties, clogging up HyVee's parking lot?

Get your own Holiday.

And if you think I'm alone in that thinking, here's another curmudgeon:

QUOTE
The Christmas Dividend

Garrison Keillor

December 20, 2009


I've just come from Cambridge, that beehive of brilliance, where nerds don't feel self-conscious: There's always someone nerdier nearby. If you are the World's Leading Authority on the mating habits of the jabberwock beetle of the Lesser Jujube Archipelago, you can take comfort in knowing that the pinch-faced drone next to you at Starbucks may be the W.L.A. on 17th-century Huguenot hymnody or a niche of quantum physics that is understood by nobody but himself.

People in Cambridge learn to be wary of brilliance, having seen geniuses in the throes of deep thought step into potholes and disappear. Such as the brilliant economist Lawrence Summers, whose presidency brought Harvard to the verge of disaster. He was the man who, against the advice of his lessers, invested Harvard's operating funds in the stock market and lost the bet. In the cold light of day, this was dumber than dirt, like putting the kids' lunch money on Valiant's Fancy to win in the 5th. And now the genius is in the White House, two short flights of stairs above the Oval Office. This does not make Cambridgeans feel better about our nation's economic future.

You can blame Ralph Waldo Emerson for the brazen foolishness of the elite. He preached here at the First Church of Cambridge, a Unitarian outfit (where I discovered that "Silent Night" has been cleverly rewritten to make it more about silence and night and not so much about God), and Emerson tossed off little bon mots that have been leading people astray ever since. "To be great is to be misunderstood," for example. This tiny gem of self-pity has given license to a million arrogant and unlovable people to imagine that their unpopularity somehow was proof of their greatness.

And all his hoo-ha about listening to the voice within and don't follow the path, make your own path and leave a trail and so forth, encouraged people who might've been excellent janitors to become bold and innovative economists who run a wealthy university into the ditch.

Unitarians listen to the Inner Voice and so they have no creed that they all stand up and recite in unison, and that's their perfect right, but it is wrong, wrong, wrong to rewrite "Silent Night." If you don't believe Jesus was God, OK, go write your own damn "Silent Night" and leave ours alone. This is spiritual piracy and cultural elitism and we Christians have stood for it long enough. And all those lousy holiday songs by Jewish guys that trash up the malls every year, Rudolph and the chestnuts and the rest of that dreck. Did one of our guys write "Grab your loafers, come along if you wanna, and we'll blow that shofar for Rosh Hashanah"? No, we didn't.

Christmas is a Christian holiday -- if you're not in the club, then buzz off. Celebrate Yule instead or dance around in druid robes for the solstice. Go light a big log, go wassailing and falalaing until you fall down, eat figgy pudding until you puke, but don't mess with the Messiah.

Christmas does not need any improvements. It is a common ordinary experience that resists brilliant innovation. Just make some gingerbread persons and light three candles and sing softly in dim light about the poor man gathering winter fu-u-el and the radiant beams and the holly and the ivy, and you've got it. Too many people work too hard to make Christmas perfect, find the perfect gifts, get a turkey that reaches 100 percent of potential. Perfection is a goal of brilliant people and it is unnecessary where Christmas is concerned.

The most wonderful Christmas of my life was 1997, a quiet day with no gifts and no tree, waiting in a New York apartment for my daughter to be born. And the second most wonderful was one in the Norwegian Arctic, where it rained every day and the sun came up around 11 and set around 1, not that you ever actually saw the sun, and the food was abominable, boiled cod and watery potatoes, and the people were cold and resentful, and there was no brilliance whatsoever. And I had the flu. Why was I there? Good question. But every year it gladdens my heart to know that I will not be going to Norway for Christmas. A terrific investment. Mr. Summers should be so smart. For one week of misery, I get an annual joyfulness dividend of at least 25 percent. Merry Christmas, my dears.

(Garrison Keillor is the author of "77 Love Sonnets," published by Common Good Books.)


And don't roll out the old, "If we don't have a good Christmas, a lot of people will go out of business!" rhetoric. If our economy hinges on things we go buy once a year for people that never asked for them because the TV tells us to, we're all in a lot of trouble.


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Dear future generations: Please accept our apologies. We were rolling drunk on petroleum.

- Kurt Vonnegut
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PostIcon Posted on: Dec. 22 2009,4:19 pm Skip to the previous post in this topic. Skip to the next post in this topic. Ignore posts   QUOTE


(Botto 82 @ Dec. 22 2009,12:16 pm)
QUOTE
Get your own Holiday.

I find that humorous, considering the Christians appropriated Christmas from the pagans and twisted it for their own purposes.

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Won't somebody please think of the children!
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PostIcon Posted on: Dec. 22 2009,4:38 pm Skip to the previous post in this topic.  Ignore posts   QUOTE

I think that everyone is forgetting what christmas is really about!!!! and to worried about how much money they can spend on gifts! or how little! I know the businesses depend on christmas but lets get real and remember what the true meaning is!
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