DisneyGerry said:But if there a repercussions for our actions with God/ a supreme being than this is not the direction we want to be heading toward.
Whew. Good thing that isn't the case.
DisneyGerry said:But if there a repercussions for our actions with God/ a supreme being than this is not the direction we want to be heading toward.

beachblanket said:Oh, really? I must have missed that Gallup study.
Crankyshank said:It's the same Gallup study that states 90% of Americans celebrate Christmas.![]()

Maybe I need to get out more, I just don't get it. 
Bob Slydell said:How many of those 90% are simply celebrating the secular aspects of the holiday?![]()
I still don't understand how a greeting that is supposed to be a friendly phrase is somehow ruining people's celebrations??
poohandwendy said:As a christian, it does not bother me that they use the word 'holidays', as there are several holidays this season...
Nothing can take away from the spirit of Christmas if it is in your heart.
Btw, they are not censoring anything. It is not the Christmas season for all of their customers.
Fitswimmer said:It's not whether people's celebrations are ruined, because they certainly aren't. Why is it easy to accept the idea non-Christians are slighted when their holidays aren't recognized, but Christians aren't allowed to feel the same way? The problem isn't solved by ignoring all references to all holidays and going generic, that just slights everyone.
basas said:Except for the fact that some 90% of the shoppers are celebrating Christmas...
Similarily, about the same ammount would be shopping for Christmas gifts. I would think the store might be a little upset if everyone who celebrated Christmas decided to shop somewhere else.
You can dance around the fact, or try to be as PC as you want, but the numbers don't change. "Other religions" make up about 5% of the population. Sure you can have a few things that celebrate their religions too (nothing wrong with that), but the fact of the matter is that you aren't escaping Christmas if you live in North America so you might as well live with it. I assume with your thought process we should print all our signs in 200 languages too? After all...there are many other languages then just English (or even Spanish) being spoken in America and we wouldn't want to 'offend' them...
Chloe'sMom said:I agree! It amazes me that anyone would be offended by being told Happy Holidays rather then Merry Christmas. Seriously - if you are offended by this then you don't have enough in your life to worry about.
~Amanda

Mugg Mann said:Got a verifiable cite for those numbers?

DisneyGerry said:

LuvDuke said:Isn't the starting date a little late for the annual "war on Christmas" BS? I could've sworn it started earlier last year.![]()
Mugg Mann said:Got a verifiable cite for those numbers?
Bob Slydell said:You missed it -- it started a couple weeks ago.![]()

beachblanket said:Percentages of American adults identifying themselves with a specific religion:
Christian - 76.5%
Jewish - 1.3%
Muslim - 0.5%
Any other faith you can name is less than 0.5%
Source:
Religious Identification in the U.S.
Bottom line Mugg: the ratio of people celebrating Christmas vs. other year end religious holidays is in the range of 70 to 1. Retailers who are afraid to say "Christmas" aren't worried about "insulting" the microsopic percentage of those celebrating a different faith. Rather, they are have been cowered into burying the "C" word by a teeny-weeny niche of the PC left that hates organized religion in general and Christianity in particular.
LuvDuke said:Let me tell you something. I'm celebrating the gift-giving/overeating/overdecorating Christmas. I am not celebrating the "Happy Birthday, Jesus" variety.
