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December 21, 2003
WAR
AGAINST CHRISTMAS 2003 COMPETITION [I] [II]
[III]
[IV] [V]
[VII] [VIII]
[IX] [X]
- See also: War Against Christmas
2002,
2001,
2000.
War Against Christmas 2003 Competition [VI]:
From The Lawns Of Iowa To The Sands Of Iraq
By
James Fulford
The Khristmaskampf rages on:
 | A reader writes from Iowa: |
“The
Iowa Civil Liberties Union
[contact
it] has told Tipton, Iowa (population
3,000, which includes most of my family) to stop
displaying their 1970s era nativity scene. The
town council is courageously—or stupidly?—standing
up to the ICLU and displaying it anyway.
“Yes, I
know this is small potatoes in the war against
Christmas, but the ICLU is picking on small towns
because they think they’ll win easily.
According to ICLU legal director
Randall C. Wilson, previously noted for his
anti-Ten Commandments bigotry, the ICLU has
“received numerous complaints concerning this display
over the years and are now writing to ask the county to
discontinue the practice of displaying the crèche on
public grounds beginning with this holiday season.[!]"[
ICLU
upset over courthouse nativity AP, December 3,
2003]
The good people of Tipton say that
this is the first they’ve heard of complaints, and
they’ve posted a disclaimer on the courthouse lawn.
They should simply tell Wilson that
the crèche won’t be there for the
“holiday season,” it’s only going to be there
for Christmas.
 | We
wrote on
December 6 about the Phillipsburg, NJ postmaster who had
decided not to hang Christmas decorations for fear of
potential protests. He’s reversed himself, because of
grassroots activism. |
“PHILLIPSBURG, New Jersey-- In an abrupt about-face, the
town's postmaster has decided to decorate the post
office for Christmas after all.
“Earlier in the week, Postmaster Victor Lopez said he
had decided to go without the holiday trappings this
year because people had complained about last year's
Christmas decorations.
“After
The Express-Times published a story about his
decision, people supportive of the decorations weighed
in, Lopez said.
‘I got
a lot of phone calls,’ he said. About a dozen people
called in support of putting up Christmas lights, he
said. [Pro-holiday
feedback convinces postmaster to hang decorations,
by Jeff Schogol, Express-Times, December 6, 2003]
But note the local paper’s
headline: “Pro-holiday feedback.” In fact, of
course, the December 25 holiday was never in question.
Postal workers will be
taking that day off no matter what.
It’s Christmas that’s the problem.
 | A soldier writes us from Iraq: |
“I've
been following the "War Against Christmas" on the site
(which is
now accessible.) For the record, I saw a giant fake
Santa on a Baghdad street and I haven't discerned any
anti-Christmas feeling from our Moslem staff. But as for
the Army, their
Army Knowledge Online site has "Holiday Greetings",
whatever that is.
“We
visited an orphanage run by Mother Teresa's order that
cares for 20 mentally and physically handicapped
children, unwanted even by their own relatives. It is
heroic work. Some of the GIs even wanted to adopt the
kids, handicap and all.
“Merry
Christmas!”
And to
you. |