December 09, 2004
WAR
AGAINST CHRISTMAS 2004 COMPETITION
[I] [II] [III]
[V]
[VI]
[VII]
[VIII]
[IX]
[X]
[XI]
[XII]
[XIII]
[XIV]
[XV]
[XVI]
[XVII]
[XVIII]
[XIX]
[XX]
- See also: War
Against Christmas
2003,
2002,
2001,
2000
War Against Christmas 2004 Competition [IV]:
The Anti-Defamation League Defames Christmas.
See also
Boycott … Bloomingdales? Sob!
By
Bryanna Bevens
When I was in
school, I remember my parents being outraged when
geography was removed from the
Government School (See Milton Friedman for his
definition) curriculum.
I had no idea why
they were so upset. Frankly, I was relieved. It wasn’t
until later when I was playing a game of
Pictionary
and I
had to draw “Madrid”
that I understood.
Yeah, I drew a
picture of
South America
with a star in the middle and grew
indignant and then verbally abusive when my partner
could not figure out what I was drawing. (My partner,
Mr. Smarty-Pants, went to a private school and
therefore knew that
Madrid
was in Asia.)
The government
schools are in trouble again. Now, they are removing all
vestiges of Christmas from school property.
A reader sends this
wonderful article about public schools in Florida:
Schools interpret rules for politically correct holidays
By Tiffany Lankes, Sarasota Herald Tribune,
December 2, 2004.
This entry may be
my personal favorite.
East Manatee, FL,
is home to several middle schools. There is one
governing school district, but each middle school seems
to be interpreting the district policy on
celebrating Christmas
differently.
Oops, I didn’t mean
celebrating because that word is verboten
in East Manatee schools. The correct word is
recognizing. They are recognizing the
holidays.
For example,
Freedom Elementary School is changing the program
for this year’s
“winter concert.”
Why? Lankes quotes the principal:
“‘There’s a lot of
rules and regulations out there,’ said Freedom Principal
Gary Holbrook, ‘You're trying to be respectful of
everyone.’
Here’s another
middle school principal in east Manatee:
“‘You won't see any
Christmas trees around here,’ said Anthony DiBello,
principal of Braden River Middle School in East Manatee
County.” ‘We keep it generic.’”
But across the
street at
Braden River Elementary School, the tree will be
going up. That school’s principal was reluctant to break
with tradition.
Whew! There’s one!
As it turns out,
the “holiday symbols” are allowed—but only if
used in a class lesson. As one teacher, from yet another
middle school put it:
“‘If you want a
Christmas tree you should be able to have it,’ said
Haile Middle School teacher Susan Darovec. ‘It's kind of
ridiculous to be treating it as a religious item.’”
I am not sure what
irritates me more: The school district behaving like a
bunch of whiny girls in pigtails or the fact that
American children are being taught by scary people who
make stupid statements like the one you just read.
It is kind of
ridiculous to treat a Christmas tree like a religious
item?
I suppose she
believes the cross is simply a piece of jewelry invented
by Madonna and rap musicians.
Lakewood High
School in Manatee erects one, large
“holiday tree” and decorates it with
“ornaments reflecting all the season’s celebrations.”
Everything from
Kwanzaa
to
Hanukah
is
covered.
Whom do we have to
thank for all this?
The Anti-Defamation
League. According to the Herald Tribune story,
“School officials in
Manatee County sent all principals a letter from the
Anti-Defamation League, an organization with Jewish
roots that fights anti-Semitism and discrimination…The
letter suggests how to keep the holidays out of their
classrooms.”
In 1998, a group of
rabbis confronted the Sarasota School District with
accusations of racism. The teachers had allegedly
endorsed Christmas activities in the classroom.
This new holiday
policy was enacted in 2002—but not, allegedly, in
response to the rabbis’ complaint.
Sure
it wasn’t.
The website for the
Anti-Defamation League has this mission statement:
“To stop the
defamation of the Jewish people…to secure justice and
fair treatment to all.”
There are many
helpful hints for avoiding what the ADL calls “The
December Dilemma.”[VDARE.COM
NOTE: See
here for the
Catholic League's
2003
answer to the
"December Dilemma," and here for their statement on
Manatee, FL.]
Every winter,
teachers “face the
difficult task of acknowledging the various religious
and secular holiday traditions celebrated during that
time of year.”
But
according to the ADL, celebrating Christmas is a
violation of our first amendment rights.
“The
First Amendment guarantees freedom of religion to all
Americans — including young schoolchildren — by
prohibiting the government from endorsing or promoting
any particular religious point of view.”
Basically, the Anti-Defamation League loves defamation,
just not about them.
My
view: banning
Christmas in the name of the First Amendment is
defamation.
It’s
Christophobic.
These
schools are all from a town
named
after a
beloved water mammal. An endangered species, the
Manatee was on the verge of extinction for having been
mowed down by speed boats for decades.
Sort
of like Christmas today.
Florida officials are obviously capable of
compassion—just not for a man who was nailed to a tree.
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly.