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Stupid People bitching about holiday greetings!
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Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View PostI'm an atheist; and I wish people "Happy Christmas." I see it as a family occasion more than anything. I never really got the hang of "Happy Holidays/Festivus/Winterville" XD
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Originally posted by anriana View PostThat would be because you're an atheist and not Jewish/Pagan/a practicer of Kwanzaa."Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."
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Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View PostI'm sorry, but I fail to see the point you're trying to make. So, you're saying that cuz I'm an atheist, I'm therefore not allowed to say "Happy Christmas" on the offchance that I might offend a pagan, Jew or someone who celebrates Kwanza? Strange, my dad is Jewish and doesn't get offended. Nor do any people who have common sense... so unless I'm telling people "Go fuck yourself and have a happy Christmas" I really don't see why people have a right to be offended.
And no, my point was that as someone who doesn't celebrate Hannukah/Solstice/Kwanza/etc, of course you wouldn't "get the hang of" those holidays or those religious greetings.
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Originally posted by anriana View PostOh, I love people who roll their eyes and say "I have a family member who is X and isn't offended by Y so there can't possibly be a problem with it, and only people with no common sense could possibly get offended by what I'm saying" argument.
Originally posted by anriana View PostAnd no, my point was that as someone who doesn't celebrate Hannukah/Solstice/Kwanza/etc, of course you wouldn't "get the hang of" those holidays or those religious greetings.
- Lace was born into and lived in a society that preaches Christmas.
- Lace was not born in a region where Christmas is considered "odd" (such as much of the Middle East, East Asia, etc).
- Lace was born into a household which would have allowed Christmas to be the norm, including the possibility that Lace was born into a Christian household.
- Lace later stopped following the practices of the parents, and became an atheist independently.
- Lace's parents were not atheists.
That's the list I could think of quickly. I'm sure there's quite a few others packed into that sentence of yours. I wasn't sure it was possible to pack so many assumptions into so small a thought. Impressive.
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Originally posted by Pedersen View PostOh, I love arguments made by people who feel that personal attacks are the easiest and most reliable way to discredit a person. And yes, what you wrote there very much sounds like a personal attack.
But, being an atheist, Lace will obviously "get the hang of" Christmas. Right. I like how many assumptions can be put into that statement, so let's list them out, shall we?
- Lace was born into and lived in a society that preaches Christmas.
- Lace was not born in a region where Christmas is considered "odd" (such as much of the Middle East, East Asia, etc).
- Lace was born into a household which would have allowed Christmas to be the norm, including the possibility that Lace was born into a Christian household.
- Lace later stopped following the practices of the parents, and became an atheist independently.
- Lace's parents were not atheists.
That's the list I could think of quickly. I'm sure there's quite a few others packed into that sentence of yours. I wasn't sure it was possible to pack so many assumptions into so small a thought. Impressive.
Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View PostI'm an atheist; and I wish people "Happy Christmas." I see it as a family occasion more than anything. I never really got the hang of "Happy Holidays/Festivus/Winterville" XD
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Originally posted by Pedersen View PostOh, I love arguments made by people who feel that personal attacks are the easiest and most reliable way to discredit a person. And yes, what you wrote there very much sounds like a personal attack.
Oh, wait -- that's right. I don't love that. It drives me batshit insane.
Don't call people out in the thread, please. If you feel there has been a personal attack, please report the post and let the moderators deal with it.
On a related note, sarcasm is best used very sparingly. It sets an antagonistic tone, and has the tendency to make arguments seem personal whether that was intended or not. If you have something to say, say it clearly and respectfully.
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My 2 cents is being spent on saying that I got lost in the thread of argument (or lack thereof).
I believe that Anriana was trying to say that Lace wouldn't get the hang of "Happy Holidays/Festivus/Winterville" because that's not a part of her cultural reference... just as those born and bred as atheist wouldn't get the hang of Merry Christmas... and those in Islamic countries wouldnt' either. How would "Happy Hannukah" go down with christians? Muslims??
Also, everyone has a right to get offended at any damn thing they want. That's the nature of being human. Whether you agree with them or not is a completely different, and irrelevent, issue.
I'm not a Xtian type person. Nor Jewish. I am pagan. Saying 'Merry Christmas' to me I take as a well wishing from someone who is ignorant of my beliefs. But if my friends do it... watch out! (especially since most - if not all - of my friends aren't christian either -and some celebrate the Solstice... and I really don't like hypocrisy).
Anriana's post makes perfect sense given her sigline.... (and "my friends are X, but they Y - thus everyone must Y as well" fits nicely into that saying).ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
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I'm a born atheist, so no religion makes sense. I still respond in kind to those wishing me a happy anything. I will respond with a happy holidays, kwanza (no matter what I think of intentionally made up holidays less than 100 years old), and merry christmas. Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you.
That's silly.
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Besides, Christmas has moved away from its religious roots, both Christian and Celtic. It shouldn't be any more insulting to a random person to wish them a Merry Christmas than wishing someone a happy President's Day, as both are secular holidays.
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Originally posted by Slytovhand View Posteveryone has a right to get offended at any damn thing they want. That's the nature of being human. Whether you agree with them or not is a completely different, and irrelevent, issue.~ The American way is to barge in with a bunch of weapons, kill indiscriminately, and satisfy the pure blood lust for revenge. All in the name of Freedom, Apple Pie, and Jesus. - AdminAssistant ~
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AH - yes, this is true. I wasn't trying to defend those idiots who make massive big deals about such things to everyone who comes along - especially about the "Happy Holidays" line - I mean, that'd be more of a 'persecution' (ha!) to only say "Merry Christmas" is an accepted greeting. "Holidays" is more encompassing - "Christmas" isn't.
How about..."Happy Consumerism Day"??ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
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