Silent night, violent night.
Well,
I am sitting here with a scratchy voice after a late night meeting. I was able to spend time with my folks, which is a treat. My mom always keeps Dove Bars stocked - which I dig.
One thing that I could blog about, that is way too easy and tired, is the constant drone about whether or not we can call this season "Christmas" or whether or not we can have "Christmas songs" or "Christmas trees" instead of "Festive" songs, seasons or trees... I find getting up in arms about this is pointless and not worth our time. What do you think?
If you don't think... what do you eat?
sd
I am sitting here with a scratchy voice after a late night meeting. I was able to spend time with my folks, which is a treat. My mom always keeps Dove Bars stocked - which I dig.
One thing that I could blog about, that is way too easy and tired, is the constant drone about whether or not we can call this season "Christmas" or whether or not we can have "Christmas songs" or "Christmas trees" instead of "Festive" songs, seasons or trees... I find getting up in arms about this is pointless and not worth our time. What do you think?
If you don't think... what do you eat?
sd
Comments
Bill Oreily has a good article on it.
Walmart is evil, and only "Evil-doers" shop there!!
Convert or die! All you Muslim, Jew, Pagan scum!! When will you understand that your belief's are false and that you will, one day soon, suffer for your folly in a, torturous, lake of fire
Evil-doers are the silliest people...
;-)
This just goes to show that it rubs me the wrong way.
I don't get it. New Year's is a holiday and Christmas is a holiday. There can be no argument about this right? So if you have two holidays and you wish to say to someone be happy at both what would you say?
Now I understand you could say Merry Christmas and a happy New Year, but wouldn't it be much easier and perfectly acceptable to say "Happy Holidays!"
Come on people... Don't read something that's not there into every little thing that is said or done. Don't you have something better you could be doing?
Christmas in our day is a collection of traditions and practices taken from many cultures and nations.
The date of December 25th comes from Rome and was a celebration of the Italic god, Saturn, and the rebirth of the sun god.
This was done long before the birth of Jesus.
It was noted by the pre-Christian Romans and other pagans, that daylight began to increase after December 22nd, when they assumed that the sun god died.