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May 22, 2013
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’Tis The Season of Fake OutragePosted on Dec 22, 2011
By David Sirota One of the defining qualities of late December is the predictable and ritualized nature of America’s holiday season. Other than discovering what’s inside the wrapped gift boxes, there’s no mystery or suspense to it anymore. The Christmas music starts right before Thanksgiving. Then come the flickering lights, the red-and-green decor, Hollywood’s vacation movie blitz, and finally, with media charlatans turning the key, the fake outrage machine rumbles back to life. Like a narcissist’s souped-up 4-by-4, this turbocharged colossus of self-righteous indignation makes a lot of noise and leaves a mess in its wake—but ultimately says a lot more about its drivers’ pitiable insecurities than anything else. This year has been particularly illustrative, as the fake outrage machine has caricatured itself like a Bigfoot-esque monster truck in a desperate bid for attention. In just the last few weeks, the Heritage Foundation billed an Agriculture Department initiative to raise revenue for tree farmers as a “Christmas Tree Tax”; Fox News said that standard federal safety warnings were proof that the government wants to “tell you how to decorate your Christmas tree”; and conservative activists criticized Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, an Independent, for daring to consecrate a “holiday tree”—rather than a “Christmas Tree”—at the Statehouse. Meanwhile, under the headline “‘Modern Grinches’ Step Up Anti-Christmas Efforts,” the Christian Broadcasting Network lashed out at cities for trying to respect the separation of church and state at holiday time, and the American Family Association continued its annual effort to denigrate companies that substitute “Happy Holidays” for “Merry Christmas.” To know that this machine’s outrage is indeed fake is to appreciate some telling facts about the alleged transgressions. For instance, the government’s recent revenue and regulatory moves were entirely routine and nonreligious, while Gov. Chafee was just preserving a longstanding tradition in a state founded as a haven for religious pluralism. Similarly, many cities are still including Christmas in their winter festivities—they are just including other celebrations as well. And if saying “Happy Holidays” somehow represents a “War on Christmas,” then none other than Christian icon Tim Tebow must be one of the aggressors’ lead field generals, what with the NFL quarterback now appearing in a television ad wishing Coloradans “Happy Holidays”—not “Merry Christmas.” Advertisement In propagating such an illusion, they’re not earnestly embodying their religion’s missionary spirit. Instead, they’re manufacturing victimhood, all to gin up sympathy and create a rationale to continue ramrodding their theology down everyone else’s throats. That some feel this need to push their faith with such craven tactics speaks volumes about the nature of spiritual self-doubt today. Sure, our tumultuous world of bombast and chaos leads us to assume that the loudest are the most devout. But in practice, those who are truly comfortable in their faith are often the most humble about their orthodoxies because they have nothing to prove. By contrast, those who are the most insecure in their beliefs can sometimes be the most in-your-face about their dogma. In that sense, there’s a “doth protest too much” tenor to the roar of the fake outrage machine. That self-indicting message may be difficult to detect amid all the exploding ordnance in the War on Christmas, but it’s there—and the more the machine revs its engines every December, the more that message comes through.
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By DonSchneider, December 29, 2011 at 7:22 am Link to this comment
Well done Mr Sirota! Nicely written however you “mix metaphors” the truth stands
Report thisout !The Tennenbaum was always a symbol of winter yule festivities, so why insist
it is connected to christianity ? And we do thinks they protesteth too much and I
agree that the loudest are the weakest of faith. The old adage fits well here, the
pig caught under the fence is usually the one doing all the squealing !
By Anarcissie, December 28, 2011 at 8:51 am Link to this comment
As with modern copyright, the problem isn’t the claim, it’s the force used to support it.
Report thisBy Marian Griffith, December 27, 2011 at 5:03 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
@anarcissi
—Burning people at the stake is one thing, and copying rituals is another. I think there is normally a considerable distance between them.—
True, but you asked how a religion could hijack the rituals of another. That is one way.
The more realistic way is to claim to be the only religion with that particular ritual and insisting on exclusivity.
Report thisBy Anarcissie, December 27, 2011 at 12:57 pm Link to this comment
Burning people at the stake is one thing, and copying rituals is another. I think there is normally a considerable distance between them.
Report thisBy Marian Griffith, December 27, 2011 at 8:21 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
@anarcissie
—How can a religion ‘hijack’ anything from another? Copying, yes, but the religion copied from still has its stuff, whatever that might be.—
Not if they are burned at the stake or otherwise tortured to death for being heretics.
However, the ‘hijack’ that was refered to here is the claim of exclusivity. It is not enough to celebrate christmas, other religious observations are being suppressed through this ‘war on christmas’ fake outrage.
It is easy to overdo the political correctness and easier still to make fun of it, but those who fake outrage over wishing ‘happy holidays’ effectively demand that only the christian holiday is openly celebrated, and only their interpretation of it.
Report thisBy Anarcissie, December 25, 2011 at 9:37 am Link to this comment
How can a religion ‘hijack’ anything from another? Copying, yes, but the religion copied from still has its stuff, whatever that might be.
People in northern climates need a certain amount of partying to get through the long dark cold, that’s all. Any proselytizers moving north will recognize as much.
Report thisBy purplewolf, December 24, 2011 at 9:50 pm Link to this comment
Christmas is a bogus holiday and it was originally the Pagan holiday of Yule, that was hijacked by a religion that has taken most of their holidays from older Pagan ones. You would think that they could have been more independent and come up with different days/months for their holidays. Even many of the tales of the Bible can be found in older history from other countries.
At least the Christmas season is a lot shorter that the Republican campaign season,an event that is now 24/7/365 non-stop since 2008.
Report thisBy Outraged, December 24, 2011 at 11:54 am Link to this comment
Okay….. I concede, apparently some really do think
there’s a war on Christmas…...lol.
Check out these polls from DailyKos:
“The ideological subgroup most likely to believe a War on Christmas is underway? Tea partiers, by 71 to 16. They’re absolutely convinced that Christmas is under attack.”
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/12/24/1047382/-Public-Policy-Polling:-America-split-on-War-on-Christmas?detail=hide&via=blog_1
Report thisBy downstreamer, December 24, 2011 at 6:29 am Link to this comment
“like a Bigfoot-esque monster truck in a desperate bid for attention.”
You might want to work on not mixing your metaphors here. It seems somehow .. desperate.
Report thisBy Fearless, December 23, 2011 at 2:31 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I like Sirota’s work. Wish I could filter Sirota, Hedges, and Fish so I don’t have to look at the rest of the garbage on this site.
Report thisBy oddsox, December 23, 2011 at 12:13 pm Link to this comment
‘Tis the Season for pulling punches.
So, from one of your more ardent and frequent critics:
David Sirota, a Happy Hanukkah and Holiday Season to you and your family.
the same + Merry Christmas to my TruthDig blog-buddies!
Report thisBy Anarcissie, December 23, 2011 at 9:09 am Link to this comment
So now we have the War on the War on the War On Christmas. Outside, it’s All Quiet on the Western Front. I wouldn’t know anything about this if I didn’t read this web site.
Report thisBy mouldingthefuture, December 23, 2011 at 8:52 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I hope none of you are spending any money funding corporations this holy day season.
Report thisBy balkas, December 23, 2011 at 7:46 am Link to this comment
get your jesus, mohammed, and moses and
Report thiseverything shld be allright. that’s a big promise.
alas, all promises are lies! tnx
By ian, December 23, 2011 at 5:55 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Stirring up faux outrage at a time of year when the focus is on peace and universal brotherhood constitutes the real “War on Christmas”.
Report thisBy Outraged, December 23, 2011 at 4:28 am Link to this comment
Really.
Do they believe that us Americans never tire of their
garbage….?
Do they seriously not realize how ridiculous everyone
thinks they are….....unbelievable. You’d think
they’d have thought the better of it by now.
My god, Fred and Barney (you know those intellectual types) are not buying this stupidity, not to mention Yosemite Sam. (yep, the Looney
Tunes….fitting) Outright idiots. Honestly, how do they leave “the office” and pretend to be normal people even in their own mind.
Rachael Maddow had a good take also:
Report thishttp://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#45760162