Michelle Malkin
in sj-r: "Yes, it’s
maddening when politically correct bur-eaucrats ban Nativity scenes and Christmas
carols in the name of 'diversity' and 'toler-ance.' We are under attack by Secularist
Grinches Gone Wild. But the war on Christmas in America is a mere skirmish. Around
the world, a bloody, repressive war on Christians rages. In Iraq, Islamist rebel
troops have declared open season on Christian churches, priests and missionaries.
In February, four American pastors were traveling near the capital when terrorists
ambushed them. The Rev. John Kelley, pastor of Curtis Corner Baptist Church in
rural Rhode Island and a for-mer Marine, was killed in the attack...."
Wash. Post-syndicated column: "I'm struck by the fact that you almost
never find Orthodox Jews com-plaining about a Christmas creche in the public square.
That is because their children, steeped in the richness of their own religious
tradition, know who they are and are not threatened by Christians celebrating
their religion in public. They are enlarged by it. It is the more deracinated
members of religious minorities, brought up largely ignorant of their own traditions,
whose religious identity is so tenuous that they feel the need to be constantly
on guard against displays of other religions -- and who think the solution to
their predicament is to prevent the other guy from displaying his religion, rather
than learning a bit about their own."
Washington
Times: "Steve Lonegan, who is running for the Republican nomination
for New Jersey gover-nor, is defying a school-district edict that bans religi-ous
music from holiday-season celebrations this year. Mr. Lonegan has asked local
residents of all religions to join him at 5 p.m. tomorrow 'to sing and listen
to' songs such as George Frederick Handel's 'Messiah' and 'Silent Night,' which
have been banned from schools, even in instrumental form, by the South Orange/Maplewood
School District. ...'The school district's decision to prohibit even instrumental
ver-sions of classic Christmas tunes shows that those who claim to speak for tolerance
are, in fact, the most intolerant,' Mr. Lonegan said."
AP
via Centre Daily: "A Democratic city councilman has demanded that a
baker remove photos of President Bush from his stand in Lancaster's venerable
farmers' market, saying the city needs a 'healing period' follow-ing the bitterly
contested presidential election. City Council member Nelson Polite approached
David Stol-tzfus last month and asked him to remove the pictures. When Stoltzfus
refused, Polite vowed to pursue a city ordinance that would ban all political
items from public places in the city. Polite said the photo offended city Democrats....After
the [Lancaster] New Era published a story about the flap earlier this month,
conservative pundits from around the nation skewered Polite as being clueless
about free speech."
"Mr
Bush is in fact in the mainstream of recent presi-dents....Jimmy Carter taught
Sunday school while president. Bill Clinton talked about Jesus more often than
Mr Bush and has spoken in more churches.... Nor, in the American context, is the
president's belief that God is involved in the world's affairs exactly ground-breaking.
The last paragraph of the declaration of independence—no less—starts by appealing
to the 'Supreme Judge of the world' and ends 'with a firm reliance on the protection
of divine provi-dence.' Both references in America's founding docu-ment are considerably
more sectarian than Mr Bush's comment about God not being neutral between freedom
and fear. They associate God with America's national interest; Mr Bush did not."
Los
Angeles Times: "Frank Wright, president of the NRB, called the negative
portrayals 'dehumanizing' and compared them to representations of Jews prior to
the Holocaust, and blacks in the era of slavery. 'Systema-tic negative portrayals
of groups of people are always disturbing,' he said. 'They produce the potting
soil that leads to persecution.' The study calls NBC 'by far the most anti-religious
network' with 9.5 negative treat-ments for every positive one. Fox had 2.4 negatives
for each positive. At the other end of the spectrum was Pax, which the Parents
Council said had 90.7% positive depictions of religion. CBS was deemed more positive
than negative by a margin of 2 to 1."
Centre
Daily Times: "Seven members of the Dover Area School District board
voted unanimously to retain a nonprofit law center that describes itself as a
defender of Christians' religious beliefs, the Thomas More Law Center of Ann Arbor,
Mich....The board did not issue a comment on its decision. The meeting came nearly
a week after two civil-liberties groups filed a lawsuit against the south-central
Pennsylvania district on behalf of families who objected to the teaching of 'intelligent
design,' which holds that the universe is so complex that it must have been created
by some higher power. About a dozen people addressed the board, and most urged
the district not to hire the firm and instead pursue other ways to end the lawsuit."
Toledo
Blade: "Donna Chiarelott, whose son is a senior at the school, objected
to the band's perfor-mance.'I think there is a place for Christian bands, and
schools aren't where they belong,' Ms. Chiarelott said. 'Maybe most people don't
really see anything wrong with it, but there is a line and this is crossing it.
I'm amazed they even considered it.' ...'I look at it similar to when we have
our choir singing songs," Ms. Gernot said. "There is a lot of choir literature
that is very Chris-tian in nature, and I don't see that as religious in nature...."Most
of the kids want us to play," [a band member] said. "We were going in there to
talk about drugs, and what our beliefs are on that. But everyone knows us as a
Christian band, and that's a touchy subject, I guess."
AP via Court TV News: "At the University of North Carolina, three incoming
freshmen sue over a reading assignment they say offends their Christian beliefs.
In Colorado and Indiana, a national conservative group publicizes student allegations
of left-wing bias by professors....And at Columbia University in New York, a documentary
film alleging that teachers intimidate students who support Israel draws the attention
of administrators. The three episodes differ in important ways, but all touch
on an issue of growing prominence on college campuses....increasingly, it is students
who are invoking academic freedom, claiming biased professors are violating their
right to a classroom free from indoctrination."
AP via MSNBC: "Archaeologists
in Jerusalem have identified the remains of the Siloam Pool, where the Bible says
Jesus miraculously cured a man's blindness, researchers said Thursday—underlining
a stirring link between the works of Jesus and ancient Jewish rituals. The archaeologists
are slowly digging out the pool, where water still runs, tucked away in what is
now the Arab neighborhood of Silwan. It was used by Jews for ritual immersions
for about 120 years until the year 70, when the Romans destroyed the Jewish Temple.
Many of Jesus' acts are directly linked to Jewish rituals, and the miracle of
the blind man is an example. According to the Bible, the man was undergoing ritual
immersion in the Siloam Pool for entry into the Temple compound, and Jesus used
the occasion to cure his blindness. "
Rockdale Citizen:
"Karneg Balekdjian, a bespec-tacled, 30-year-old clerk for the Armenian Church
of Jerusalem, won’t be celebrating Christmas this year with his family. He recently
packed his suitcases, said goodbye to his loved ones and the only home he’s ever
known. 'I’m not leaving Jerusalem for opportunity,' said Karneg 'but for love.'
Israeli officials barred Balekdjian’s 26-year old bride, Ivette Askandarian, from
immigrating to Israel. Born and raised in Iran — but Christian and ethnically
Armenian — Ivette couldn’t even visit Karneg in Jerusalem yet alone live with
him. 'We had no idea,' Balekdjian sighed, 'our lives together would begin with
forced separation.'"
Kathleen
Parker, Gwinett Daily Post: It may be true that religious conservatives
helped Bush win re-elec-tion. And while some evangelical leaders have express-ed
their expectation that Bush will act promptly on some of their pet issues, others
have been more temperate....Prison Fellowship leader Charles Colson, for example,
wrote Bush after the election to say that Christians shouldn’t be another political-pressure
group. He told Bush that he voted for him not because of what he would do, but
because of the kind of man he is. The bland truth is that Bush is unlikely to
deliver on religi-ous conservatives’ expectations in any dramatic or immediate
way simply because it isn’t his style. As Michael Gerson—Bush speechwriter and
policy adviser —puts it, Bush is an 'incrementalist.'"
"In
Maplewood, N.J., some parents worried that they'd become a national laughingstock
after the school dis-trict banned Christmas carols, even instrumental ver-sions....
Even 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' was out, because it mentions Christmas Eve.
'It's worse than silly, it's a great disservice to music education,' said Tom
Reingold, the father of two, who is Jewish. 'There's a way to teach music and
not make it coer-cive.' John W. Whitehead, president of the conservative Rutherford
Institute, calls it the new Golden Rule: Thou Shalt Offend No One....whose group
has for the first time in almost a decade re-issued its 'Twelve Rules of Christmas'
booklet outlining ways to legally include religion in Christmas displays and observances."
Kenneth
Woodward in Newsweek: "Serious Chris-tians have always been ambivalent
about how society celebrates Christmas. It’s hard to get children to focus on
the birth of Christ, and what that means, when the arrival of Santa Claus—and
all that that portends in the way of hectic getting and spending—is imminent.
The quiet subtleties of 'Silent Night' are no match for the clang of 'Jingle Bells.'
Now it appears that even the secularized Christmas that Santa represents is too
sectarian for some keepers of the nation’s public spaces and commercial places.
Wherever you look, references to Christmas have been suppressed in favor of a
featureless 'Seasons Greetings.'"
Rabbi Aryeh Spero in Human Events: "It should be obvious by now
that the Bill of Rights forbade only Con-gress from making national laws establishing
a religion, not however local communities and their majorities from voting to
express their religious ethos. Unique to Amer-ica is the ideal that what may be
forbidden to the 'Feds' is permitted on a local level....But even if some wish
to extrapolate Jefferson's metaphor of a "wall of separa-tion" between church
and state onto local communities, how does the display in winter of a sparkling
Christmas tree, or a freely-chosen Grace before meals, or the ack-nowledgement
of the Ten Commandments as the basis of the American legal system, and the existence
of a God-believing, heterosexual Boy Scout troop 'establish' a national religion?"
The Australian:
"One thing that would never have occurred to my parents is to be offended at public
manifestations of the Christ in Christmas. One of the recurrent features of the
debate we are having is that there never is any reffo or migrant who will step
forward and say they are offended by nativity scenes and such like. As Waleed
Aly, from the Islamic Council of Vic-toria, wrote in The Australian last
week, the attempt to cleanse Christianity from the public celebration of Christmas
'is done more on behalf of religious minor-ities than by them. Perhaps the point
is that Christmas in the West has been a multicultural affair since long before
the term 'multiculturalism' was invented."
A Christmas gift from XnmpThe "gift"
is a tip. Add the Google toolbar to your computer's
Internet Explorer browser. It zaps popup ads on news websites, which is great,
but even better, its search option to "search this site" is awesome.
It's virtually an index of any site, including this one. Try itgo to the
web address below, click "download," and it automatically installs itself
if your computer is WIndows XP. And Merry Christmas! (This
endorsement was not paid or solicited.) webmaster