| ||||||||
| ||||||||
| ||||||||
|
Home : 2005 : December : 5
Article entitled: How the secular humanist grinch didn't steal Christmas. Quote: Despite Johnson's lamentations, one can
Another quote: Ironically, when school officials do go too far, the ACLU is likely to challenge them, on the grounds that the government can neither promote nor restrict religious speech. "A lot of the things the ACLU does to help religious people and religious students are not high-profile cases; they don't get much attention," says Haynes. "The Christian student who is told she can't bring her Bible to school, the ACLU gets those kinds of calls, and often it doesn't become a lawsuit, but they will quietly tell the school you can't do this, you have to treat everyone fairly." And finally: In fact, there is no war on Christmas. What there is, rather, is a burgeoning myth of a war on Christmas, assembled out of old reactionary tropes, urban legends, exaggerated anecdotes and increasingly organized hostility to the American Civil Liberties Union. It's a myth that can be self-fulfilling, as school board members and local politicians believe the false conservative claim that they can't celebrate Christmas without getting sued by the ACLU and thus jettison beloved traditions, enraging citizens and perpetuating a potent culture-war meme. This in turn furthers the myth of an anti-Christmas conspiracy. The earliest references in the modern American media to "anti-Christian groups" were made by Henry Fonda back in 1921. He claimed it was a conspiracy of Jewish people out to destory the religion. We are teachers; we can also be critical thinkers! Don't believe everything you see on FOX News!
View the original thread this idea was posted on ![]() BACK The ProTeacher Collection - All rights reserved For individual use only. Do not copy, reproduce or transmit. Copyright © 1998-2008 ProTeacher® Visit our ProTeacher Community What people are currently discussing in the ProTeacher Community: |
| |||||||