O'Reilly said that there haven't been the huge drive this year against it so that there has been no reason to get upset this year.I think there are plenty of nuts who want to gripe about it...and some are. We just aren't hearing as much about it. Just wait, O'Reilly or someone will gather up a story in a few days and there it will be. Right now the talk is about socialized medicine and the build-up in Afghanistan and such. Pretty boring news for me so I've sworn off for a few days. I like to be happy this time of year. One more day for me and then I got two weeks off....yippee!!![]()
O'Reilly said that there haven't been the huge drive this year against it so that there has been no reason to get upset this year.
Personally I just say Merry Christmas and let others say whatever they want.
Saying Merry Christmas to a Jew or an athist is like saying Happy Fourth Of July to a Britt. It just shows ignorance of the other person....
Saying Merry Christmas to a Jew or an athist is like saying Happy Fourth Of July to a Britt. It just shows ignorance of the other person....
Should we make people wear signs around their neck with their stated religion so we don't accidently offend them by saying Merry Christmas?
If I am in a synagogue or know that I'm talking to a Jew I obviously woulnd't say, "Merry Christmas" just like if I were in London on the 4th I wouldn't say "Happy 4th of July" to some bloke I meet on the street. If I were with my freinds from over there I would say "Happy 4th of July" just to get a rise out of them....and I would, but that's another story.
If I meet someone on the street in America and feel compelled to address him/her with a seasonal greeting I would likely say, "Merry Christmas" and not worry about it. Why should I?
No, you should just say Happy Holidays unless you know the person well enough to know what they celebrate. Why wish people a merry X-mas when you know a certian percentage dont celebrate such a thing?
I'm with cawacko, just make people wear signs saying what offends them and we won't. Jarod, you're asking a nation that is ... well, look at these stats. I took them off a site that is anti-merrychristmas. I don't know where they got them but they are close to right:
97 percent of Americans celebrate Christmas.
53 percent of Americans are offended when wished "Happy Holidays."
90 percent of Americans "know the true meaning of Christmas."
60 percent say they won't shop at stores that have anti-Christmas policies.
68 percent of Americans want to hear "Merry Christmas" specifically.
I'm supposed to be careful how I say something because it might offend....(I'm going to give you a liberal number of those offended) 3 to 10% of the population. Please.
Long ago, I would get a little annoyed from being wished Merry Christmas, not because of Christmas itself, but because it usually reminded me how rarely other people even stop to think that someone might have a different background or custom than they do.
But over the years, I came to recognize that it is otherwise a very nice and polite gesture, and even if it is incorrectly attributed to you, it at least means you can return the wish back to that person and not be incorrect about it yourself.
To bring it back to politics, it does bug me when I do something political and there are the appearances of those same assumptions. Howard Dean got a lot of heat when he said the GOP was basically a white, Christian party, but I don't often see a lot of Republicans doing much to disturb that notion.
I guess it kind of depends on where you live and what kind of communities there are around you. There's truth to the statement that your lifestyle and culture influences your politics, but that doesn't mean there aren't a lot of people who choose politics from a perspective other than the stereotype of what their culture is supposed to be.
A huge bunch of the young people (for one, because they're young people) I've gotten involved in Young Americans for Liberty and the like would not be the profile of folks I would see at a GOP gathering, but they sure do fit in on the issues.
So, when I'm going to a Republican luncheon where the only entree served is pulled pork, for instance, or the opening prayer is directed toward a specific religious group, sometimes it makes me wonder if they had thought what it would look like to someone who is with them on the issues, but comes from another direction culturally.
O'Reilly said that there haven't been the huge drive this year against it so that there has been no reason to get upset this year.
Personally I just say Merry Christmas and let others say whatever they want.
Right. Live in fear of "offending" people by wishing them to be happy. I worry about that all the time and stuff....No, you should just say Happy Holidays unless you know the person well enough to know what they celebrate. Why wish people a merry X-mas when you know a certian percentage dont celebrate such a thing?
It depends on what you think a "huge drive" is.Can anyone point to any year there really was a "huge drive against" Christmas? Or was that simply more of O'Reilly's hyperbole?