December 07, 2004
WAR
AGAINST CHRISTMAS 2004 COMPETITION
[I]
[III]
[IV]
[V]
[VI]
[VII]
[VIII]
[IX]
[X]
[XI]
[XII]
[XIII]
[XIV]
[XV]
[XVI]
[XVII]
[XVIII]
[XIX]
[XX]
- See also: War
Against Christmas
2003,
2002,
2001,
2000
War Against Christmas 2004 Competition [II]: Big
Media Notices The Resistance In Denver
By
Bryanna Bevens
SOME people at VDare.com (who shall remain nameless in
order to protect the guilty) refer to me as the
“staff moderate.”
Calling me a moderate is like calling
Strom Thurmond wishy-washy but in any event, my
predilection for sarcasm had to factor in on
Peter Brimelow’s decision to assign me to write about
the
War Against Christmas competition.
That being said, I could not be happier to oblige him.
We begin today’s lesson in Mile High country.
Sam Karnick, co-editor
The Reform Club blog, has a fine piece in the
American Spectator entitled
Muscular Christians Flex Their Muscles,
summarizing a controversy that we’ve had a lot of email
about.
Denver, Colorado has an annual Christmas parade much
like every other city in the country.
A
private non-profit group organizes the festivities:
The
Downtown Denver Partnership.
AS we’ve
reported,
The Faith Bible Chapel of Arvada, Colorado was told by
the partnership that it could not enter a float in this
year’s parade. According to the
Denver Post, the Downtown Denver Partnership
"…cited a longstanding policy against overtly religious
and political themes.”
So I
have some thoughts…
Is
there anything more overtly religious, in and of itself,
than Christmas? What does the “partnership”
think a Christmas parade (even if disguised as a
“Festival Of Lights”) celebrates?
Christmas celebrates one thing and one thing only: The
birth of Jesus Christ. It has never meant anything
else. (Which would probably explain the name of the
holiday but I am just guessing.)
Overtly religious? Does the partnership believe that
Christmas is about a furry, oversized rat that crawls
out of his burrow to check for his shadow…oh, and leaves
presents?
On
Sunday, Even the New York Times reporter (gasp!)
implicitly
sided with the Christians (this is either one of the
seven signs of the Apocalypse or times are-a-changin’):
"Like
a spark in dry tinder, the result was a flare-up that
caught even some church leaders by surprise. A holiday
rite that had drawn thousands of parade goers annually
suddenly became a symbol, for many Christians, of
secular society run amok."
Roughly one thousand Christians gathered at the parade
and sang hymns in peaceful protest.
(The
Pastor of Faith Bible Chapel is apparently a former
Marine with a “Bring it On, Ooh-Rah” approach to
ministry…much like my own former Marine pastor. I knew
I loved Marines for a reason.)
Here’s a tip for the parade organizers: I don’t care
what your personal faith is but if you want to have a
parade that avoids anything “overtly religious”
might I suggest you have it on another day. ANY
other day!
In
fact, how about Arbor Day?
You
and the
Sierra Club can have a ball…although I don’t
recommend you cut down any trees, which would be
the functional equivalent of removing Jesus Christ from
Christmas.
In
other news…
I
have to be honest. Sometimes the Salvation Army guy who
stands out in front of stores with a Santa hat, ringing
a bell and asking for donations, really irritates me.
I
don’t know why!! I know it’s wrong but sometimes I just
want to grab his bell and run it over with my car.
But
Jack Kendrick writes us:
“Don't forget
Target Stores! They have banned the Salvation Army bell ringers. This Christian charity is one of America’s finest organizations.”
You
see, if there is anything more inappropriate during the
Christmas Season, it’s Christian charity.
Why
would Target want to celebrate the birth of Jesus by
feeding the hungry, clothing the needy and sheltering
the cold as those unacceptable people at the Salvation
Army do EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR??
Oh,
that’s right! For corporations such as Target (Dayton
Hudson Corporation) Christmas is just a two-three month
season that shows a dramatic increase in sales…for
seemingly unknown reasons.
I
avoid Target most of the time because of a language
barrier. Here in California, very few of their employees
speak English.
However, I am going to avoid them now for being greedy,
ungrateful fat cats.
But
here is Target’s
email if you wish to comment on their decision to
remove Christian charity for Christmas.
More
War Against Christmas entries tomorrow…
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly.