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Archives for: November 2005

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Sloppy work by NewsHour

Was I the only person watching The NewsHour segment on Cape Wind last night who was puzzled as to why Cliff Carroll's www.windstop.org was described as a "grass-roots organization"?

"Organization"? Why - because of the domain suffix ".org"?

If it's a "grass-roots organization," why is Carroll's the only name associated with the site? Does windstop.org have a board of directors or trustees? Is it a registered non-profit?

I'm fully willing to be set straight if wrong about this, but based on what I've seen, windstop.org is an organization only to the extent you pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.

Come to think of it, where did NewsHour reporter Tom Bearden come away with this impression when, by all appearances, windstop.org is a one-man website.

Not only did the segment create an organization where none appears to exist, it overlooked a local grass-roots organization with more than 5,000 members that actually does exist - Clean Power Now.

The sloppiness didn't end there. At one point,  Bearden said Cape Wind would supply nearly three-quarters of the electricity used on the Cape - but only 1 percent for the state as a whole. 

That 1 percent refers to the amount Cape Wind would contribute to the New England Power Pool.  Simply dividing the number of residents on the Cape - roughly 240,000 - by residents in the state as a whole - about 6 million - comes to about 4 percent. 

Constantine last defender of Constantinople

Constantine as the fall of ConstantinopleConstantine XI Paleologus was the last Emperor of the Byzantine Empire.  The last of the Emperor  Constantines from the founding of the empire 1123 years earlier by Constantine the Great on May 11, 330 A.D. 

Constantine XI Paleologus, also known as Constantine Drageses (Gr. Κωνσταντίνος ΧΙ Δραγάσης Παλαιολόγος), (February 9, 1404 – May 29, 1453) was the last reigning emperor of the Byzantine Empire from 1449 to his death when  after almost two months of heroic defense, directed by the emperor, Constantinople and the empire fell.  The Emperor, when realising that the end had come, discarded his purple cloak and charged into the breach. He died fighting with the last of his men.

A ruler of great wisdom, I hope by adopting his name I shall be gifted with a little of his. 

Wall Street Journal looks askance at Delahunt-engineered oil deal with Venezuela

... in an editorial today under the headline,
"Oil for Friends" -  Hugo Ch?vez repays his Congressional amigo

"Money can't buy love, unless you're Anna Nicole Smith. But these days a little heating oil can buy friends in Washington, especially if they come as cheap as Democrat William Delahunt. Massachusetts wants bargain oil prices to help it through the winter. Venezuelan tyrant Hugo Chavez wants influence in Washington. Leave it to the Congressman from the Commonwealth and a Kennedy to close the deal," the editorial states.

" ... 'To Citgo (a US-based subsidiary of the nationalized Venezuelan oil industry), to the people of Venezuela, our debt,' the Congressman pledged. Mr. Delahunt should rightly feel a debt to the people of Venezuela, whose per-capita income is perhaps one-tenth that of Massachusetts and whose sole source of hard currency is the oil that their leader is now giving away to the second-richest state in the union. But Mr. Delahunt has no unpaid debt to Mr. Chavez. For some years now the Congressman has been lobbying hard for the Venezuelan despot, whom he paints as a misunderstood humanitarian. How French."

"Mr. Chavez came to power in 1999," the editorial further states. "In seven years he has a domestic record of human rights abuses, election fraud, property confiscations a la Zimbabwe's (Robert) Mugabe, erosion of the independent judiciary, limits on press freedom and militarization. His best friends include Fidel Castro, the Iranian mullahs and Colombia's FARC terrorists ."

"The Bush Administration is worried about all this, but Mr. Delahunt has no qualms. After Mr. Chavez was briefly deposed in 2002 because of his use of violence against dissent, Mr. Delahunt visited Venezuela and proclaimed, 'I think he's learned from this. I think he understands that healing and reconciliation are the true qualities of leadership, not division.' Mr. Chavez's attacks on critics have since worsened. "

"Mr. Delahunt returned to Caracas to dine with Mr. Chavez in August and was asked if he might be working in opposition to U.S. policy. 'I don't work for Condoleezza Rice. I don't report to the State Department. I report to the people who elected me in the state of Massachusetts. I belong to an independent branch of government,' " the editorial goes on to say.

"Which would be more accurate if it were possible for Massachusetts to have a separate foreign policy. Mr. Delahunt's lobbying for the dictator undermines any official U.S. pressure on Mr. Chavez to behave more humanely, which is precisely why Mr. Chavez is returning the favor by plying Mr. Delahunt with cheap oil."

"For less pliable Americans," the editorial concludes, "el jefe Caracas has a different policy. On Monday a U.S. Congressional delegation led by House International Relations Chairman Henry Hyde and ranking Democrat Tom Lantos was barred from entering the country and held aboard their aircraft for two hours (blogger's note - Delahunt serves on the same committee).  The delegation's itinerary had been known to Venezuelan officials for weeks. For a little more discount oil, perhaps Mr. Delahunt will explain to his colleagues how this was all just one big misunderstanding." See original editorial (after one-time registration) here.

National news program reports on Cape Wind ...

... Tuesday night at 6, The Newshour with Jim Lehrer, on PBS. For more info, go to The Newshour's website.

The Christmas Pine and the Cape

Cape Cod Christmas TreeThanksgiving has now come & gone
& next is that wonderful time of Christma
s.
     So what would remind us of the Cape that comes out of Christmas. I always put up my tree the weekend of Thanksgiving, I figure if I am going to do all that work I might as well enjoy it for a while. After many hours of labor and toil, I finally put the topper on this evening. My daughter looked at me and said "you know what, the tree reminds me of our trips to the Cape."
Her memory is not so much of the salt air, or the sand, but the smell of pine trees all around. I never really thought about it before, but she is right.
     As you come on the Cape and drive down the Mid-Cape highway you drive through all those pine trees from the bridge all the way out to Orleans. It sounds strange, but as the weather gets wackier and colder, and the only thing green around is that tree in your living room or family room. You have to hang on to those memories that remind you of warm and sunny times.
     There will be another way to bring me memories in coming years. I love to do theme trees in my home, and every year I do a different theme. I build a couple of themes then rotate them from year to year. I look forward to the day when I have the room to put up two or three trees instead of just one and show off my collections.
Imagine a Cape Cod themed tree
      One of those trees will be a Cape Cod themed tree (see above). I have started collecting ornaments from different parts of the Cape and someday will have a large enough collection to do a Cape themed tree, and that will be very fun for me and help bring warm memories of this Cape this time of year. What a great tradition to start and to build memories not only for yourself but for your children and grandchildren. What a way to tell them stories how when and where you got each ornament and the joy they bring into your life.
      So as we go into this season, smell the air, and let the smell of pine fill your memories, knowing that somewhere, someone is going through serious withdraw not being able to be on the Cape at this time.

Proving damages in Donelan case could prove difficult

It was reported last week in the Cape Cod Times that John Donelan, a founding member of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, had "knowingly published defamatory statements about the developer of the proposed wind farm, a Massachusetts trial court judge has determined."

"But before any liability can be entered, Cape Wind Associates must prove an e-mail and press release sent by (Donelan) damaged their reputation," wrote the Times'  Kevin Dennehy on Nov. 23.

Donelan was the Alliance's research director in January 2004 when he sent the press release to the State House News Service, falsely claiming that a Hyannis company had backed out of a business deal with Cape Wind.

Cape Wind President Jim Gordon hired a private investigator who traced the e-mail back to Donelan. Cape Wind sued Donelan in March 2004 and, later that same day, he admitted his role in the deception to Times' reporter John Leaning and was fired by Alliance executive director Sue Nickerson.

While Donelan initially came clean to Leaning, he quickly clammed up once the lawsuit got underway, invoking the Fifth Amendment more than 400 times during his deposition and  never commenting to the press.

It was not until the judge's determination could Cape Wind say unequivocally that Donelan had sent out the phony press release.

But whether his actions damaged Cape Wind could be difficult to prove. As I recall, the press release was posted on the State House News Service website for less than 24 hours, until Jim Gordon complained about it.

I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me that Cape Wind now needs to find a person or company who refused to continue doing business with Cape Wind as a result of the press release, or decided against working with Cape Wind because of it. Had either or both occurred, chances are we would have heard about it by now.

If anything, the entity most damaged by Donelan's deceit was not Cape Wind, it was the Alliance. And the damage could get considerably worse - as Dennehy wrote in the same article, "Alliance officials are still hoping a state appeals judge will overturn a March court decision that would allow Cape Wind to review more than 400 of the group's e-mails and documents as part of the libel suit. Donelan also is a former employee of the Cape Cod Times."

Cape Wind wants the Alliance records examined to resolve once and for all that Donelan acted alone, as the Alliance has long maintained.

Donelan worked part-time at the Times, posting content at the paper's website on Saturday and Sunday mornings. I'm not sure how long he worked there, but I believe he left sometime in 2002 for a job at the Alliance.

Do As I Say,(Not As I Do)

New best-selling blockbuster explains how leading liberals preach one set of ideals for you and me while living by quite different standards themselves.

Hypocrisy has proved to be a wonderful weapon for liberals in their war against conservatives. When a pro-family politician gets caught cheating on his wife, or a conservative pundit turns out to have a bad habit or addiction, their enemies use the charge to good effect. Fair enough. But what happens when the spotlights are turned on liberals themselves? Do the supporters of progressive taxes, affirmative action, strict environmental safeguards, and unionized labor practice what they preach?

In a word: NO. Do As I Say (Not As I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy is Hoover Fellow Peter Schweizer's hard-hitting exposé of the contradictions between the public stances and real-life behavior of prominent liberals like  Ted Kennedy. Among the books charges are these ; 

  • Ted Kennedy favors racial set-asides on federal contracts -- but when it came to his own investment in an entire city block of Washington, DC, he got his political friends to help him waive an affirmative action set-aside

  • Another of Kennedy's great causes has been support of the estate or inheritance tax. But, he has repeatedly benefited from an intricate web of trusts and private foundations that have kept most of the family pie from ever ending up in the hands of the IRS

  • Kennedy has introduced dozens of pieces of legislation over the years to encourage alternative energy sources. But he helped block the Cape Wind Project -- an effort to provide clean energy for thousands of homes on Cape Cod -- because the project would be built in one of the family's favorite sailing and yachting areas. This at the same time he and his family own oil stocks and even oil companies starting in 1950 when his father bought Artic Oil. The Kennedys subsequently bought two more oil companies and made a killing in the Texas oil fields.

Read the  review here.

Political Correctness Gone Wrong

 A sidebar to the above is one of our favorite liberals, Sarah Peake of Ptown going whacko over an antique painting in Town Hall which didn't have a woman in it. This is especially troubling for the rest of us non-Ptown folks since Ms. Peake is the presumptive heir to Representative Shirley Gomes' seat in next November's  election

Read all of Brian McGrory very funny column in today's Globe, but try this for starters:

Winter must come awfully early to that little spit of sand called Provincetown. The town isn't exactly Mayberry to begin with, if you know what I mean. But as the cold winds blow relentlessly down Commercial Street and the gray waves slap constantly against the shore, the isolation must lead to a total divorce from reality.

Think Jack Nicholson in ''The Shining." How else to explain the bizarre behavior of a majority of the town's selectmen at a meeting earlier this month? To wit, Selectwoman Sarah Peake spun her chair around near the end of the Nov. 14 meeting, gazed up at an oversized oil painting depicting the Pilgrims voting on the Mayflower Compact when they first landed in Provincetown, and declared that she wanted it removed.

Mind you, it's not that she didn't like the look or the colors or the style. It's not that she thought it was too big or too small for the Judge Welsh Hearing Room. It's not that it clashed with anything around it.

No, what Peake didn't like was that the painting didn't include any women. That and the fact that the painting's only Indian -- Native American, I'd better call him -- wasn't holding a ballot like everyone else."  Read the rest here.

P.S. One of the comments below points out that The Cape Codder ran this story a week ago, and no, our local daily hasn't seen fit to let us know about this insanity until two weeks later (after CNC and The Globe covered it for them) when it began the lame excuses for MS Peake's incredible stupidity and lack of class. 

Cyber Monday on the Vineyard

Well, alright, we don't exactly experience Cyber Monday here on the Vineyard. While a few of our retailers have web sites, and the ability to sell merchandise online, the vast majority of business here is still the walk-in variety.
 
I celebrated Thanksgiving in southern Maine with my family at my sister's house. Got back on the boat Saturday night, grateful for the weather-moderating effects of being surrounded by the ocean. After 4 days of snow and temperatures in the teens and twenties, we really appreciated the 45 degrees when we got back on-island.
 
Buy it online for $15.99The latest news from the Rock includes the release of an album of Christmas music by the 13-year-old Katie Ann Mayhew, now available at the Bunch of Grapes bookstore in Vineyard Haven. She'll be appearing at the Borders in Hyannis on December 11 from 2PM to 4PM... believe me, well worth the trip if you're in the neighborhood. Of course, I may be biased; Katie's one of my daughter's best friends.
 
We're all getting ready for an influx of visitors over the holidays as well. Christmas in Edgartown is the weekend of December 9, and our "Last Night First Day" celebrations are always well-attended. After the holidays begins my own favorite time on the island...the dead of winter. More about that in future postings.
 
I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving with family and friends. Please remember to take a deep breath whenever you find yourself caught up in the stresses of the holidays!
 
Finally, I wanted to let you know about a special event this Sunday. I'll be reading from and signing copies of my bestselling book, "Become Your Own Great and Powerful:  A Woman's Guide to Leading Your Real, Big Life", at Women Empowered, a local non-profit organization providing education and support services to Island women and girls. If you're on this side of the ditch, please join me. The event is free, runs from 1PM-3PM at Women Empowered's offices at 95 State Road in Vineyard Haven, and refreshments will be served. All proceeds from book sales that day will be donated to Women Empowered.
 
Happy Monday everyone! 

Clean Power Now to show new video of trips to Denmark

Liz Argo... as produced by CPN board member and videographer Liz Argo, on Thursday December 8 at 7 p.m. at the Yarmouth senior center, 528 Forest Road, Yarmouth.

The 30-minute video includes footage from trips to Denmark in January 2004 and last May, including a boat tour of the 72-turbine wind farm off Nysted in southern Denmark.

A wine and cheese reception will follow and those attending will have a chance to ask questions of Liz and others who went on the trips.

The event is free and open to the public. For more info on Clean Power Now, follow this link to their website.

A Tree Grows In Boston

What's in A Name?

Boston Holiday TreeThanksgiving is over.  And I hope we all had something to be thankful for.  Now that our bellies are full we can all get ready to empty our wallets as we speed towards the December "Holidays."  It's almost time for Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa and, perhaps some other holiday I don't yet know about.

These past few weeks there's been a lot of hoopla in Massachusetts (where else) about the possible renaming of a certain "Christmas Tree." 

Yup, those folks in charge of  "stuff" are trying to decide if the official state "Christmas Tree" should instead be called a "Holiday Tree" (to better include other religions and secularists during the "Holiday Season."

And they better decide fast...it was cut down late last week and is on its way to be trimmed and topped as we speak.

As Mayor Mennino and Governor Romney point out the pros and cons of such a change, other politicians are "skittishly" taking (or not taking sides) on this one.  Changing the name of this tree could get "sticky" around election time.  Personally, if I were a politician anywhere near Boston I think I'd be, "Unreachable at my winter vacation home in the Bahamas until Jan. 3rd." 

That's not to say that as "Citizen Rapp" I have not had a thought or two of my own on this controversial subject.

I'm actually amused ... although a bit concerned.  I'm amused by what appears to be the silliness of the whole thing... and concerned by the inherent complications and underlying consequences of any decision that would change the name of such a beloved icon.                                                            

My God!  The "Christmas Tree" could end up another symbol for the separation of Church and State

Holiday Complications                                                                               

Grinch Alert:  Holy goodness,  "Merry Christmas," itself may be in danger!   

Although many people still send out Christmas cards, others have, for many years already, chosen to send out secular cards with sayings like, "Seasons Greetings" or "Happy Holidays."  It's all about sharing good will... and not offending anyone.

When I was growing up, not too many Christians sent, "Merry Christmas" cards to their Jewish friends.  And as far back as I can recollect, Jews  never sent out Happy Chanukah cards to their Gentile friends either.  I mean Chanukah and Christmas are never very far apart on the yearly calendar, but in a religious sense you might say, they've got more than a few "testaments" between them.

But, somewhere during the middle of a last century December (probably during the Sixties), some Americans started sending friends of differing faiths more and more "secular" cards, with simple wishes for a happy holiday.  It just seemed the thing to do.  I mean that whole era brought more people of different faiths and creeds together to work and play than at any other time in our history.  People just wanted to show respect and love for each other at holiday time without crossing any religious boundaries that were foreign to them.  Secular cards just seemed "politcally correct."

And this seemed to work for quite a while... except for the "purists" (both Christian and Jewish).  To them it would always be either Christmas or Chanukah.  One or the other.  Not both!  But that was OK too.  There's nothing wrong with being traditional about certain things.  Let some people celebrate the "Holidays" ... and let others observe their religious traditions.  Live and let live.  And Hallmark wins no matter what the card says.

Now we have another December celebration:  Kwanzaa.                                     

This is not a religious, but a "cultural" holiday, celebrating African Americans.  It seems like a fine holiday to me, but I think a lot of people just wish Kwanzaa wasn't also in December.
Nothing racist meant  (Many African Americans are Christian and Jewish as well as other religions), but it does sort of complicate what is already a double sided holiday card by adding yet another page to it.  And I have to ask (feel free to let me know), is Kwanzaa in December because it's based on any old African traditions, the winter Solstice, or some ancient custom?  Or is it possible that some clever Madison Avenue types added it to the growing "consumerism" that's been attacking all American religious and cultural holidays (Be My Valentine?) for years?  I'm just curious.

And what about everybody else who's not Jewish, Christian or African American?  What about the  Hindus, Buddhists, Native Americans, Taoists and Muslims?  Do they feel "left out" or will they ask for some winter "Holiday" time too?  Well, December looks a little crowded for the moment.  Hmmm.... I think we might have a nice opening sometime in February or perhaps March?

I mean I can totally understand why some people have thrown their hands up in the air after trying hard to hold onto their old traditions.  It's not easy keeping things the same in a changing world. But, there's a very thin line between trying to hold on to benign forms of tradition, and certain virulent forms of fundamentalism that can quietly creep in, folding back on itself like a Black Hole trying to close all the doors behind it.  And if one of those Black Holes (in the form of some radical religious group) starts wanting to run public policy in favor of their own group, you usually end up having to deal with that pesky, "Separation of Church and State" Constitutional amendment thing.

But, let's not ruin the day by jumping ahead.  The Supreme Court top ten list discussion can wait for another time (Like when we're discussing abstract notions of Jewish, Buddhist, Hindu and Native American Presidents).  Sadly, Muslims are temporarily off the waiting list for this century.

The Way We Were

I'm sure many of you Bay Staters already know that the very religious Puritans did not even celebrate Christmas. They considered it an abomination to throw parties, give gifts or pass around the eggnog like the rest of the growing colonial world was beginning to do to celebrate the birth of baby Jesus.

And when visitors (even other Christians) from New York, Rhode Island and other such, "worldly" places brought back some of the new and increasingly popular "American" Christmas customs, they were told to ignore these wicked practices or they'd burn in hell.
I have no doubt they would have hung Santa as a witch ... had he shown up in Salem wearing his red suit and carrying a bag of gifts back in 1630. 

Oh Christmas Tree, Oh Christmas Tree

The "Christmas Tree," custom (with all its lights, bells and whistles) was actually only brought to America by Northern European Immigrants in the mid 1800s.  Evergreen trees had been part of old pagan winter solstice celebrations and holidays (like Saturnalia) for centuries back in the old country.  And when these people eventually became Christians, they just incorporated their beloved holiday trees right into their new religion (Cut down a tree for Jesus! Hallelujah!).

Hey, these colorful people also brought St. Nicholas, Santa Claus, Father Christmas and a bunch of elves with them when they later crossed the pond to the new world.  Now who doesn't love them and that great Toy Shop at the North Pole?

But allowing old "Tannenbaum" a prominent place in the celebration of the birth of Jesus was a very clever move by the Church.  Convincing Northern Europe and Britain to convert to Christianity was much easier when the people were allowed to keep some of their Celtic/Wiccan/Pagan holiday customs (although toned down and properly directed) like their Winter Tree. 
It was a compromise of sorts.  A good one (This idea worked well with many other cultures around the world as well).  Everyone was happy ... well, most of the time anyway.

So, is the Christmas tree really a religious symbol?  Or just a pagan leftover?  Heck, I'm even willing to wager that Santa Claus and Jesus never even met!

You Light Up My Street

As for Christmas.  The birth of Jesus.  The Christ Mass.  That's another story.
This truly is a very holy occasion for many in the world.  Lots of people actually still go to Midnight Mass on the Eve of the event and spend the following day gathered with extended family for a simple, traditional, Christmas dinner.

But for others?  Well, it's just a darned good reason to get on the "Birthday Bandwagon" and party from Thanksgiving until Dec. 26th.  Yee-ha!  You know it's begun when suddenly the houses on your block start to light up. One of my neighbors threw the switch yesterday, at dusk (While I was still eating leftover turkey and cranberry sauce).  That dilapidated old house looks like it may fall down any minute ... but they've got those strings of Christmas lights up and running!  Truthfully, the lights actually make the place look more habitable (daylight brings back grim reality).

Some people decorate for Christmas very tastefully.  Maybe a well trimmed wreath on the door, a few well placed non blinking white bulbs. A single candle in the window.  Classic.
But for others?  Look out ... It's showtime! Don't you just love your neighbor's nightly display of tawdry, twinkling, red and green light bulbs timed to the dancing and prancing of reindeers, elves and little snowmen all over the front lawn?  Come on ... It rocks!

RudolphNot to be outdone, what about that twenty foot tall Rudolph with the enormous red "Neon Nose" in front of the house directly across the street from you? He's lighting up your block like Times Square on New Year's Eve.  Zzzzzzt ....  Zzzzzzt... Oh Lord ... Rudolph seems to have a short in his left nostril ... but what the heck, they're gonna leave him on anyway ... and he's right across from your bedroom window.  "Rudee!  Rudee!  Rudee."

And who needs headlights when the dark street you're driving down suddenly lights up with the glow of a 25 foot high Super-Sized Santa, rocking back and forth and waving at you from his "Snow Covered Space Sleigh" atop some guys roof?  Hell, there's enough light coming from a thing like that to play a game of street hockey at midnight.  It's got enough blinkers and blonkers on it to be seen from space! But, then again, people do feel somewhat redeemed from the madness if they can find a small spot to stick a nice manger scene in the middle of all this razzle dazzle.  Although, I've also seen some manger scenes that look like Spielberg productions.  "Jesus, call home."

It's What's Inside That Counts

Back inside the house stands the beloved Christmas tree.  They've gotten a little pricey lately.  Have you noticed?  But so what, right? It's Christmas. Go for it!  What's one car payment more or less when you think of all the joy it will bring?

Now some people still like go the traditional way, simply threading popcorn around the modest Dutch Elm ... trimmed with the traditional candles that end up causing all the traditional Christmas fires every year. 
Others love the modern approach.  Lots of pretty, personalized ornaments, colored balls, ropes of garland, tons of tinsel (watch the cat) and hundreds of tiny little electric light bulbs crisscrossed around the big Blue Spruce.  Some prefer the star on top ... others like the angel.

Either way, just remember to unplug all the those pretty little lights at bedtime, or you and your neighbor with the popcorn may be trading Yule Log stories standing in your frozen underwear at 4 AM while waiting for the fire engines.

And those of you who have the synthetic, reusable trees with the new fibre optic lights? You're pretty safe ... even if you forget about everything and pass out from the punch.
But, no matter what type of tree you have, the best part is that there will hopefully be lots of presents under it on Christmas morning.

An interesting phenomenon to also ponder at this time of year is something called, "Christmas Tree Envy."  This usually happens to Jewish kids, but it can be found in other non Christian religions as well.  It stems from never having had a holiday tree as a child (Yet seeing them looking ever so beautiful and magical while visiting friends).

Occasionally, when these (obviously unorthodox) Jewish kids become adults, they finally feel free to do what mom and dad never allowed:  Bringing home a nice Scotch Pine and trimming it from top to bottom to their hearts content.  The trick seems to be in calling it a "Chanukah Bush."  Somehow that transforms it into some kind of  hybrid that can "almost" be explained to their kids, or anyone else who may seem puzzled (I have even seen Chanukah Bushes with dreidel ornaments on them).

This is true. I wouldn't kid you.  Some Jewish folks love the lights and razzle dazzle just as much as your wild and crazy Christian neighbors!  But, there is kind of a limit to how far even a Reform Jew can take this.  So, many settle for just a nice big lavish tree inside, and one modest electric menorah in the window.  Look, some things (like twinkling lights and bells and whistles) transcend all religious, ethnic and cultural boundaries...

Shop 'Til You Drop

There are lots of people that think the "Holidays" are just a time for good cheer and nondenominational shopping.  Shopping?  To celebrate the birth of Jesus? To celebrate the miracle of the eight days of burning oil called Chanukah? To celebrate African Pride?
You bet!   Check the Malls.  I was out there myself first thing Friday afternoon.  I got a great deal on some toy ponies and dump trucks for the kids.  Hey, I had to go.  All the good stuff may be gone by next week.

If you don't buy the kids, the wife, the husband, even the boss a gift, you're going to be in the "Christmas/Chanukah/Holiday/Seasonal" dog house!  Woof!  Actually, gift wrapped pet toys, cookies and even clothing for your best friends dog or cat has become quite the rage.

This is big business folks.  We all need to get with the program and buy as much as we can, spend as much as we have, and "Give" 'til it hurts.  Merchants are waiting to hear from you now.  Pick up a phone, click onto a website, interact with your home cable system;  There are people standing by to take your orders (and you can still get delivery before Christmas).
Just accept that for the next four weeks, we belong to the advertisers, the retailers and the American economy!  Act accordingly and this country stays solvent.  Let your spending "Trickle Down" to those that need it ... as well as those that don't.

You don't want to be the one responsible for a bad economic quarter, do you?  Do your civic duty!  Buy lots of stuff!

Just remember, whether you celebrate Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa, Saturnalia or a nice simple Solstice ... it's really just semantics to Corporate America.  The real religious values of Christmas and Chanukah are still there for those that want them. They always have been.  And anyone who is very devout and pious, probably would not (or perhaps should not)  get too involved with national holiday obsessions over Santa Claus, (Hanukkah Harry, if you watch SNL), Elves, Snowmen, Pagan Icons, electric light shows and boisterous buying frenzies anyway.  Don't you think?

But,  for the rest of the population?   
'Tis the Season!  Ho Ho Ho and Chai Chai Chai... Whether you send out "Holiday" or "Christmas" cards ... just send them with lots of love and wishes for a good new year.  If you want to enclose a check, be my guest ...  and thank you very much.
Throw a party, buy gourmet food and a nice bottle of top shelf booze.  Be generous and spread some cheer.  Give everyone that works for you a bonus so they can go out and spend some too.
If you receive a bonus ... be sure to blow it all before New Year's Eve.  And use your credit cards too.  It's American as apple pie.  These days it's actually downright patriotic!

Go buy a Christmas tree!  Buy two.  Get yourself a nice Chanukah Bush while you're at it.  Real or fake, buy the biggest one you can, and decorate the heck out of it with lots of gorgeous ornaments and lovely lights.  Then wrap as many wonderful gifts as you can with lots of bows and ribbons ... and tuck them all under that tree for those you love.

So, is it a Christmas tree?  You bet.    Is it the "Christmas Season?" You bet.  Is it also the  "Holiday Season" (sure).  Other than that I haven't got a clue what the fuss is all about.  But, whatever you celebrate, enjoy it.  It only happens once a year. And, as the old saying goes, "Eat drink and be merry, for tomorrow waits for no man.
                                   
#######
 ***To paraphrase Dave Letterman, have fun because, "We all may be dead from Bird Flu by next year anyway."

UPDATE - Dec. 1st: Washington DC lit up the National  "Christmas" Tree this week, after it's own debate on the subject.   I was sure I heard the tree "debate, was also settled in Boston but the final result is as confusing as the reason it all started.  Mayor Mennino insists he lit a Christmas Tree tonight, but Parks Commissioner, Antonia Pollak, was quoted on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s Web site Wednesday as saying the Blue Spruce, a gift from Nova Scotia, was dubbed a, "Holiday Tree" because, “A lot of people celebrate various religious holidays but also enjoy the lights, and we’re trying to be inclusive.”  As it stands now, the renaming back to a "Christmas Tree" will have to wait for next year.   Channel Five reported in the first half of their broadcast tonight that the "Holiday Tree" lighting was, "coming up soon," and then referred to it later in the same show as the as the, "64th annual Christmas Tree Lighting."   Well, whatever it is, it sure looked good.  And, remember:  This blog is your official source  for any future public Chanukah Bush Lightings for Cape Cod and all points north to Boston.

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