Christmas as we know it.......
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Christmas as we know it.......         

Group: alt.current-events.wtc.bush-knew · Group Profile
Author: Gandalf Grey
Date: Dec 19, 2006 08:50

Call me Ebenezer, but Christmas as we know it needs to go...

By Jason Miller
Created Dec 17 2006 - 6:36pm

Bursting forth with renewed intensity, the "War on Christmas" is back in
2006.

So just what does this alleged war against an impalpable enemy entail?

Have "Islamofascists" captured and decapitated Santa Claus?

Did a US-made IDF "smart bomb" strike Bethlehem and obliterate baby Jesus as
he lay in the manger?

Did the Grinch go global with his nefarious thievery?

Actually, the answer can be found amongst the corporate media's nearly
countless obfuscations and deceits.

Divisive, sophistic arguments crafted by "sage" pundits and readily accepted
by genuflecting readers admonish that secular forces are determined to
eradicate Christmas and its celebrants' joy with the zeal of a restaurateur
exterminating cockroaches. What an ingenious way to divert attention from
the ongoing genocide in Iraq and the gutting of our Constitution!

Christmas may not truly be under siege, but our corporate overlords have
certainly discovered myriad ways to wield it as a psychological weapon and
to administer it as an "opiate of the masses".

While Christmas may only come once a year, the pernicious effects of the
Consumerism it manifests to such a high degree are virtually omnipresent in
a society premised on acquisitiveness. Consumerism is the tap root of the
sprawling and gnarled tree of predatory Capitalism. Like an aberrant black
walnut tree of gargantuan proportion, American Capitalism(1) exudes toxins
that stunt or eradicate nearly every living thing attempting to grow within
the circumference of its expansive root system.

As recently as 2004, major US retailers raked in a staggering $216.3 billion
in November and December as each US consumer spent an average of $835.00 on
holiday gifts(2).
Making the minimum monthly payment on just $1200.00 worth of credit card
debt at an interest rate of 18%% would take a mere 22 years to repay(3).
Welcome to debt slavery!

What of Santa Claus and Rudolph? Despite Global Climate Change decimating
their home at the North Pole, they are merrily leading Consumerism's charge
toward humanitarian and ecological disaster. If Santa's scheme is to retire
to a palatial estate in Miami, he can forget that. As the polar ice cap
melts, most of Florida will be inundated.

While visions of sugar plums are dancing through the heads of many US
Americans, Santa's real elves wallow in abject misery. 57%% of the toys sold
in the United States are imported from China, with Wal-Mart leading the way.
In December of 2001 the National Labor Committee issued a report entitled
Toys of Misery which profiled the working conditions in Chinese factories
that produced Harry Potter and Barbie toys. Working 16 hours a day and seven
days a week, young Chinese women received as little as 17 cents per hour to
perform repetitive operations over 3,000 times per day. They languished in
temperatures exceeding 100 degrees while breathing noxious fumes in
improperly ventilated buildings(4).

Unfortunately for Chinese laborers, more recent reports indicate little
improvement in their situation(5,6,7). Evidence compiled just last month
demonstrates that suppliers for Wal-Mart, Hasbro, and Disney are still
egregiously exploiting employees in Chinese toy factories. Even Dickens
would have been shocked at the plight of these wretched souls.

Meanwhile many US Americans are adhering to their indoctrination by
acquiring as many material possessions they possibly can. Oblivious to the
human or environmental cost, they shop with the fervor of Christian zealots
converting the "heathen aboriginals" of Turtle Island.

Global Issues (www.globalissues.org [1]) has compiled some startling and
appalling information concerning the diseased phenomenon of Consumerism:

"Inequalities in consumption are stark. Globally, the 20%% of the world's
people in the highest-income countries account for 86%% of total private
consumption expenditures - the poorest 20%% a minuscule 1.3%%.

More specifically, the richest fifth:

. Consume 45%% of all meat and fish, the poorest fifth 5%%
. Consume 58%% of total energy, the poorest fifth less than 4%%
. Have 74%% of all telephone lines, the poorest fifth 1.5%%
. Consume 84%% of all paper, the poorest fifth 1.1%%
. Own 87%% of the world's vehicle fleet, the poorest fifth less than 1%%"

Global Issues also highlighted some of our grossly misplaced priorities.
While in just one year the United States spent $8 billion on cosmetics and
the world devoted $780 billion to wars and the military. Global expenditures
on basic education totaled a scant $6 billion. That same year the world
appropriated a miserly $9 billion to provide people with clean drinking
water.

Bear in mind that Global Issues derived these numbers from a United Nations
report issued in 1998. However, World Bank data from 2003 reflected little
improvement in the glaring disparities of consumption or in our shamefully
misplaced priorities.

Anchoring Consumerism as it does, it is patently absurd to believe for a
moment that Christmas is the least bit threatened. Consumerism is essential
to those stalking the corridors of power in the United States. They need the
"Season to be Jolly" to obscure the crimes they have committed (including
offenses for which men were sentenced to hang at Nuremberg) and to ensure
that the hoi polloi remains obedient.

No, Consumerism, and hence Christmas, are quite safe. They are essential
components of the power structure spawning and protecting beasts like Bush
and Cheney.

In his 1999 book, Global Problems and the Culture of Capitalism, Richard
Robbins observed:

"[T]he consumer revolution of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries was caused in large part by a crisis in production; new
technologies had resulted in production of more goods, but there were not
enough people to buy them. Since production is such an essential part of the
culture of capitalism, society quickly adapted to the crisis by convincing
people to buy things, by altering basic institutions and even generating a
new ideology of pleasure. The economic crisis of the late nineteenth century
was solved, but at considerable expense to the environment in the additional
waste that was created and resources that were consumed."

With respect to advertising, the deeply compelling psychological mechanism
through which American Capitalists entice the masses to buy more and more of
what they don't need, Robbins explained:

"The goal of the advertisers was to aggressively shape consumer desires and
create value in commodities by imbuing them with the power to transform the
consumer into a more desirable person. ... In 1880, only $30 million was
invested in advertising in the United States; by 1910, new businesses, such
as oil, food, electricity and rubber, were spending $600 million, or 4
percent of the national income, on advertising. Today that figure has
climbed to well over $120 billion in the United States and to over $250
billion worldwide."

And the Corporatocracy has received a tremendous bang for its advertising
buck, as evidenced by more statistics provided by Global Issues:

"World consumption has expanded at an unprecedented pace over the 20th
century, with private and public consumption expenditures reaching $24
trillion in 1998, twice the level of 1975 and six times that of 1950. In
1900 real consumption expenditure was barely $1.5 trillion."

Given the horrendous fallout from America's extraordinarily avaricious
behavior, perhaps a "War on Christmas", and hence Consumerism, wouldn't be
such a calamity after all. But rather than launching a belligerent attack so
typical of the United States, what we really need is a non-violent spiritual
struggle to establish a meaningful observance of the birth of Christ.

Some view Jesus Christ as a god, some a man, and others a myth. Yet
regardless of which concept one embraces, the moral teachings attributed to
Christ rank at or near the peak of humanity's ethical evolution. Devoting a
day to commemorate him certainly makes sense when one considers some of the
other historical figures whom we celebrate.

While it is impossible to be 100%% certain, it is extremely unlikely that
Christ would find much virtue in the perversion that Christmas has become. I
suspect he would demand answers to at least four questions:

1. Why is so much emphasis placed on materialism on a day honoring an
individual who devoted himself to the poor and down-trodden?

2. What are we teaching our children by showering them with virtually
everything they want (and then some) while 10 million people starve to death
each day?

3. Why do we further enslave ourselves to amoral corporations by taking on
mountains of debt to buy more of their products for which we have no real
need, thus contributing to their ongoing rape of humanity and the Earth?

4. Why do we devote only one of 365 days to "peace on Earth and good will
toward men"?
How would one respond to such challenges?

I have been addressing them head on for the last several years and have no
intention of ceasing to toil. For me it has been a slow, steady, and
humbling progression. Little by little I have been divesting myself from
complicity in the multitude of crimes against humanity perpetrated by those
atop the pyramid of American Capitalism.

Striving each day to remain free from the addictive, deleterious, and
exploitative products of the alcohol, tobacco, soft drink, and pornography
industries, I practice a number of the principles of the Twelve Step program
along with an eclectic set of moral values I have cobbled together over the
course of my spiritual journey, including many of those espoused and modeled
by Christ.

Of course I fall down at times, but I am quick to get back up, take
responsibility, and make amends. It goes without saying that as a human
being I can embody but a percentage of my ideals. Yet I have found that the
more vigorously I apply myself, the greater that percentage becomes.
Obviously there is a point of diminishing returns in terms of exerting
effort. Once I reach that leveling point, I lower my intensity.

Over the last few months, I have stepped up my recycling efforts
significantly.

Embracing a somewhat ascetic lifestyle, it is a rare occasion when I buy
something simply because I want it.

I have boycotted Wal-Mart for over two years now, paying substantially more
for groceries and other necessities than when I shopped there regularly.

I generally shun corporate chains and frequent stores owned by small
entrepreneurs or local companies as often as possible.

Rather than taking a second job that would help fuel the engine of rapacious
Capitalism, I do volunteer work with homeless shelters. Besides giving my
spare time and energy to help the domestic victims of America's ruthless
socioeconomic system, I also donate what little money I can afford and buy
my clothes from a thrift store that subsidizes the City Union Mission,
Kansas City's largest organization servicing homeless human beings.

This Christmas, I have asked friends and family members who typically give
me gifts to do so in the form of money so that I can give even more to the
deeply impoverished. I have also chosen to incur no debt in purchasing
gifts.

During the 2006 holiday season, I am purging yet another ugly aspect of
Consumerism from my being. My effort will involve defying years of
inculcation by a society that puts a substantial premium on money, violence
and crushing the competition.

For as long as I can remember, I have been an avid supporter of the Kansas
City Chiefs, an NFL football team. Yet as a strident domestic critic of
American Capitalism and as a person dedicated to a path of spiritual
development, I have determined that my time, emotional energy, and
intellectual efforts are wasted when I devote them to supporting corporate
entities which generate billions of dollars for a handful of wealthy elites
or their pampered employees who receive millions of dollars to play a game.

Reflecting on the extent of domestic and world poverty, I have come to view
my relatively modest collection of Chiefs apparel and memorabilia as
sinfully large. Besides selling these items and contributing the proceeds to
worthy causes, I will make a conscious transition from rabid NFL fan to
casual observer.

Like the gradual yet steady forces of erosion, appreciable numbers of
individuals pursuing moral paths can significantly mitigate the damage
rendered by Consumerism. And it is possible for one to pursue such a course
without dropping off the grid, self-destructing, or going to the extreme of
someone like Diogenes.

So in the spirit of my proposed alternative to "Christmas as we know it",
here's hoping that Santa and Rudolph do retire to Florida.

Before it's too late..

Bah, Humbug!

End Notes and Suggested Reading:

(1)American Capitalism is a malignancy that permeates our economic, social,
and political systems and institutions. This untreated cancer ravaging the
body of civilization is spreading like an unchecked conflagration in a
munitions factory. Feudalism didn't die; it simply evolved. Corporatism,
Consumerism, wage slavery, debt slavery, free trade agreements,
deregulation, and privatization condemn most of the global population to
varying degrees of slavery, serfdom or indentured servitude.

(2) http://ask.yahoo.com/20051214.html [2]

(3) http://myvesta.org/pubs/html/post_holiday_headaches.htm [3]

(4) http://www.ethicalconsumer.org/magazine/buyers/79/toysreport.pdf [4]

(5) http://www.coopamerica.org/programs/rs/profile.cfm?id=263 [5]

(6) http://www.coopamerica.org/programs/rs/profile.cfm?id=263 [6]

(7) http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/mar2006/toys-m25.shtml [7]

(8) http://www.verdant.net/society.htm [8]

_______
Jason Miller

About author Jason Miller is a wage slave of the American Empire who has
freed himself intellectually and spiritually. He writes prolifically and his
essays have appeared widely on the Internet. He welcomes constructive
correspondence at willpowerful@hotmail.com [9] or via his blog, Thomas
Paine's Corner, at http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/ [10].

--
NOTICE: This post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not
always been authorized by the copyright owner. I am making such material
available to advance understanding of
political, human rights, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues. I
believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107

"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles. It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt. But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an opportunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson
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