I didn’t intend to do two “war on Christmas” posts in the same day, but I saw a poll that needs more attention.
The story has generally been a tongue-in-cheek commentary for weeks. There isn’t a real conflict because only one side is doing all the complaining. When the O’Reilly/Falwell/AFA crowd starts a letter campaign against a department store that wishes its customers “happy holidays,” there is no other side — secularists and religious minorities are not organizing to keep the word “Christmas” out of newspaper ad supplements. I more or less assumed some far-right activists were worked up, but the rest of the country recognized how silly this “debate” really is.
Unfortunately, that may not be the case. National Journal reported that a new Fox News poll suggests that many Americans genuinely believe that a campaign against Christianity is real.
Nearly six in 10 respondents said they felt like Christianity is under attack, and a 49-percent plurality said religion in general is currently embattled. Forty-two percent said there was a “war” on Christmas in the United States, although a 48-percent plurality disagreed.
Even more — 58 percent — said the Christian symbols of the holiday, such as nativity scenes, are being attacked more now than they were one year ago.
Granted, I haven’t seen the wording of the questions. For that matter, the poll did come from Fox News. But has all the conservative whining really been this effective? Could 42% of the country really believe that there’s a “war on Christmas”? What do they see that the rest of us don’t?
Over the weekend, writer Neil Gabler was on Fox News explaining that FNC personalities like Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, and John Gibson are “demagogues” who seek to “rally the masses” with this “war on Christmas” silliness.
“They’ll do it every Christmas. They did it last Christmas; they’ll do it next Christmas…. The media, particularly Fox media, has been pumping the hell out of this thing.”
And apparently, it’s working. The overwhelming majority of Americans will be celebrating Christmas, many with Nativity scenes on their lawn and a tree in their house. It’s even a federal holiday. Where’s the “war”?
Last year, armed police broke up a Christmas Mass at an underground Catholic church in eastern China, arresting the priest, demolishing a makeshift pulpit and scattering two thousand worshippers. Around the same time, some seasonal temp at the mall wished Bill O’Reilly a generic “Happy Holidays” and he felt like a victim.
Too many people have completely lost their sense of perspective.