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To: Lane3 who wrote (150339)12/9/2005 11:58:39 AM
From: MichaelSkyy  Respond to of 793916
 
After clicking on your link, I found this:

townhall.com

The Jewish Grinch who stole Christmas

By Burt Prelutsky

Dec 8, 2005

I never thought I’d live to see the day that Christmas would become a dirty word. You think it hasn’t? Then why is it that people are being prevented from saying it in polite society for fear that it will offend?

Schools are being forced to replace “Christmas vacation” with “winter break” in their printed schedules. At Macy’s, the word is verboten even though they’ve made untold millions of dollars from their sympathetic portrayal in the Christmas classic, “Miracle on 34th Street.” Carols, even instrumental versions, are banned in certain places. A major postal delivery service has not only made their drivers doff their Santa caps, but ordered them not to decorate their trucks with Christmas wreaths.

How is it, one well might ask, that in a Christian nation this is happening? And in case you find that designation objectionable, would you deny that India is a Hindu country, that Pakistan is Muslim, that Poland is Catholic? That doesn’t mean those nations are theocracies. But when the overwhelming majority of a country’s population is of one religion, and roughly 90% of Americans happen to be one sort of Christian or another, only a damn fool would deny the obvious.

Although it seems a long time ago, it really wasn’t, that people who came here from other places made every attempt to fit in. Assimilation wasn’t a threat to anyone; it was what the Statue of Liberty represented. E pluribus unum, one out of many, was our motto. The world’s melting pot was our nickname. It didn’t mean that any group of people had to check their customs, culture or cuisine, at the door. It did mean that they, and especially their children, learned English, and that they learned to live and let live.

That has changed, you may have noticed. And I blame my fellow Jews. When it comes to pushing the multicultural, anti-Christian, agenda, you find Jewish judges, Jewish journalists, and the ACLU, at the forefront.

Being Jewish, I should report, Christmas was never celebrated by my family. But what was there not to like about the holiday? To begin with, it provided a welcome two week break from school. The decorated trees were nice, the lights were beautiful, “It’s a Wonderful Life” was a great movie, and some of the best Christmas songs were even written by Jews.

But the dirty little secret in America is that anti-Semitism is no longer a problem in society; it’s been replaced by a rampant anti-Christianity. For example, the hatred spewed towards George W. Bush has far less to do with his policies than it does with his religion. The Jews voice no concern when a Bill Clinton or a John Kerry makes a big production out of showing up at black Baptist churches or posing with Rev. Jesse Jackson because they understand that’s just politics. They only object to politicians attending church for religious reasons.

My fellow Jews, who often have the survival of Israel heading the list of their concerns when it comes to electing a president, only gave 26% of their vote to Bush, even though he is clearly the most pro-Israel president we’ve ever had in the Oval Office.

It is the ACLU, which is overwhelmingly Jewish in terms of membership and funding, that is leading the attack against Christianity in America. It is they who have conned far too many people into believing that the phrase “separation of church and state” actually exists somewhere in the Constitution.

You may have noticed, though, that the ACLU is highly selective when it comes to religious intolerance. The same group of self-righteous shysters who, at the drop of a “Merry Christmas” will slap you with an injunction, will fight for the right of an American Indian to ingest peyote and a devout Islamic woman to be veiled on her driver’s license.

I happen to despise bullies and bigots. I hate them when they represent the majority, but no less when, like Jews in America, they represent an infinitesimal minority.

I am getting the idea that too many Jews won’t be happy until they pull off their own version of the Spanish Inquisition, forcing Christians to either deny their faith and convert to agnosticism or suffer the consequences.

I should point out that many of these people abhor Judaism every bit as much as they do Christianity. They’re the ones who behave as if atheism were a calling. They’re the nutcakes who go berserk if anyone even says, “In God we trust” or mentions that the Declaration of Independence refers to a Creator with a capital “C.” By this time, I’m only surprised that they haven’t begun a campaign to do away with Sunday as a day of rest. After all, it’s only for religious reasons – Christian reasons – that Sunday, and not Tuesday or Wednesday, is so designated.

This is a Christian nation, my friends. And all of us are fortunate it is one, and that so many Americans have seen fit to live up to the highest precepts of their religion. Speaking as a member of a minority group – and one of the smaller ones at that – I say it behooves those of us who don’t accept Jesus Christ as our savior to show some gratitude to those who do, and to start respecting the values and traditions of the overwhelming majority of our fellow citizens, just as we keep insisting that they respect ours.

Merry Christmas.

Find this story at: townhall.com



To: Lane3 who wrote (150339)12/9/2005 12:18:23 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793916
 
Mother Angelica For Indecency
Orphans of à la carte cable pricing
Tim Cavanaugh

To the untrained eye, last week's indecency roundup hosted by Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) and Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI) may have demonstrated the ineffectiveness of the American government. Somehow a country whose tradition of comstockery goes all the way back to Anthony Comstock himself, which once proudly banned sailor-mouthed literary masterworks, whose bluenoses managed to drive Lenny Bruce onto a fatal toilet, has been reduced to this: two octogenarians who represent places that shouldn't even be U.S. states giving L. Brent Bozell III a public forum to get sweaty over all the "bestiality" and "necrophilia" available on broadcast television in prime time (naturally without specifying where the average viewer might be able to see this kind of action).

But in the aftermath of the indecency panel, the Senate's power to thwart and destroy has been reaffirmed. As "à la carte pricing" has emerged as the likeliest way for the cable industry to solve this non-problem and avoid an attempt at FCC control of non-broadcast communications, decency hawks and consumer advocates, and even an aspiring cable or company or two, have joined forces to declare this a swell idea. With that many interests in agreement, you can be fairly sure this idea stinks.

Stinks? you say. How can a new system, wherein the individual cable viewer, rather than a committee of faceless apparatchiks holed up in the bowels of some massive cable conglomerate, gets to choose his or her own package of TV channels possibly stink? Who the hell are you, Mr. I Love The Big Cable Oligarchy, to sneer at empowering consumers? This is the general attitude of a San Francisco Chronicle editorial today that revels in the notion of nervous cable guys:

[FCC Chairman Kevin] Martin's plan is a boon for bill-paying TV watchers. Who, after all, wants to pay for deep-outfield channels offering moose hunting and celebrity poker games? It's a safe bet that most people click to favorite channels and ignore the rest, so why not just pay for what is used?

Why not, indeed? Here's why: By any yardstick, the average contemporary cable offering affords a selection that is orders of magnitude richer and more varied than anything that's been available in the history of television. Of the two forces in favor of à la carte pricing, only one—the decency advocates—actually wants to shrink this selection. Consumer activists, on the other hand, are simply pursuing the great American tradition of seeking something for nothing. The à la carte plan will satisfy neither side. Decency types, having protected unwilling viewers from receiving risqué programming, will inevitably turn next to willing viewers, and seek to ensure that nobody can be exposed to risqué programming. But for consumer activists, the disappointment will be even more immediate: They'll find that there is no way the new pricing plan can reproduce even a tenth of what they're now getting.

I mean that literally. The various à la carte schemes that have been offered up so far don't survive even the most basic back-of-the-envelope calculations. But here's one anyway: My cable channels go all the way up to the 900s (where the dependable Music Choice channels reside, and where I, in apparent defiance of normal cable subscriber behavior, have spent many a bluegrass- and New Wave-soothed hour). Of course, most of those nearly 1,000 channels are blanks, Pay-Per-View offers, or subscribe-to-me dummies. Only when the à la carte discussion started to heat up did I laboriously click through each of my channels, to discover that, not counting music-only choices, $65 a month buys me 147 channels.

Now the à la carte argument is that most viewers watch only a fraction of the available offerings and that thus I'm overestimating the value of those 147 channels. I disagree with that argument, but that's just me. An FCC study that Martin has lately been touting to support his own recent shift in support of à la carte notes that most viewers only watch about 17 channels, and that a decent package can be cobbled together featuring just the basics (including all the networks, a couple of the news channels, and so on), and allowing subscribers to purchase their choice of additional channels at prices estimated between $3.90 and $4.73.

In other words, the FCC proposes to get us back to a package that will deliver exactly four channels more than I used to get on a rabbit-ears TV when Gerald Ford was president. Only now you have to pay for it. Of course, you can supplement that package with individually purchased channels. You may have a cable package more humble than my own expanded-basic deal, but if we take the lowest end of the FCC's per-channel estimate, it's still costing me more than $500 per month to reproduce what I'm now getting for $65. Whether I watch those channels frequently, rarely, or not at all, this can not be described as anything other than a drastic reduction in consumer choice.

Although the excitement over à la carte has been widespread, there are a few folks out there who seem to be approaching my conclusion. An A. T. Kearney study lays out some potential drawbacks of the new plan. Of course, since this plan is still in its early stages, it's possible that Comcast may decide to retain packages like mine while also offering à la carte packages. But I'm not trusting Comcast to act in my best interests, particularly when it has the foolproof excuse that the government is forcing its hand.

There is another class of losers in the à la carte revolution: those weird channels mocked by the Chronicle as "moose-hunting" and "celebrity poker" and by Conan O'Brien in a recurring sketch wherein he reviews obscure cable offerings like "The Lincoln Money Shot Channel," "The Sanford & Son Boxing Channel," and "The Kissinger Keep-Away Channel." But not all these channels that benefit from general must-carry deals are so easily dismissed, and again, a few people have begun to catch on to the danger. As an individual line item offered at four bucks a pop, I would never say yes to Mother Angelica's EWTN network, but I like having it there, and have even eked a profitable, enjoyable piece of freelance work out of one of its offerings. No wonder religious broadcasters have been among the surprising objectors to the Brent Bozell-approved plan to "unbundle indecency." Under the current setup they can boast of having millions of subscribers; forced into an à la carte menu, those millions would rapidly dwindle into the tens. (Religious programmers may have a hitherto unacknowledged decency problem of their own: By the standards of just about half the American population, EWTN's steady diet of pro-life, anti-gay content could surely be considered objectionable.)

My kids would suffer too. Forced into tightwad decisions about our TV diet, I would definitely lose most of the kid-friendly channels (of the Sprout/Noggin/Disney genre) in my current lineup. We currently get eight or nine of those, and I should really find out exactly how many—but at prices like these, why bother? And who's to say when I might have need of the booze- and caffeine-free fare on the BYUTV channel that dwells somewhere in the upper reaches of my dial? Or what of Logo? I'd never actively pay for Logo's all-gay content, but like an ostensibly straight man hanging around a remote rest area, I like to have it there as a constant possibility. The bottom line is: Why should I be punished because you like TV less than I do? Why should Mother Angelica?

Unlike Brent Bozell—a congenital liar who participates in the fiction that the v-chip and the vast array of parental controls already available on cable are terrible failures—I do not believe indecency on television is a problem. But I'll offer a solution anyway. AT&T and Verizon are both trying to get into the cable game, and they're both backing à la carte. So let them go ahead. In the absence of government strong-arming, let them play the role upstarts are supposed to play: competing by offering a new way of doing business. And if consumers decide they like what these new players have to offer, then bully for everybody. Meanwhile, let the FCC get back to policing its shrinking area of communications, and let Kevin Martin use the free time to get some sunshine and drink something that will put hair on his chest and whiskers on his disturbingly boyish chin.

Tim Cavanaugh, is Reason's Web editor.



To: Lane3 who wrote (150339)12/9/2005 1:55:58 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793916
 
You might enjoy this as well...Myths of the Season: A Pagan Christmas.

rochesterunitarian.org



To: Lane3 who wrote (150339)12/9/2005 2:34:26 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793916
 

"4. "Happy Holidays" was not created to soothe the non-Christians.


Could have come from "Happy Holy days."