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Other religions were doing it before Christianity. Diwali in Hinduism is the celebration of the new fiscal year, at which time a lot of money is spent on jewelry.
December 25 is the old Anglo-Saxon pagan midwinter festival of âgeolâ (pronounced âyuleâ), following âmodranihtâ (mothersâ night). Christianity stole it on the basis that if people were going to have a feast anyway, they might as well do it for Jesus. rather than Woden.
Oh, Hobbes, you naif. Yes, other religions have picked up on that. For example, when I visited Malaysia, I discoverd Hari Raya (as they call the first day after Ramadan) is basically Christmas and Valentine Day rolled into one.
When I was a kid, I used to get presents for Hannukah. Of course, I donât any more, but itâs still my favorite holiday because of its meaning: the victory of an oppressed people over a dictatorial tyrant.
They have, Hobbes. Oh, they have. Even I get âEid moneyâ from a friend who lives in London; an online friend Iâve chatted with for years but never actually met.
Presents under the tree might be consumerist heaven. I currently work in a thrift outlet where regifted Christmas stuff gets delivered by the boxful multiple times each day. The junk stretches from one end of the storage room to the next. Thatâs what Iâd call consumerist hell.
Based on his behavior, I donât know why he expects loads of loot. I guess itâs because his parents still love the little rapscallion, despite his behavior.
Anthropologists view such acts as Christmas commercialism as demonstrations of a societyâs underlying wealth. It helps us be prepared for activities such as war or other survival necessities, i.e. we have money to throw away.
It isnât the religions that made it into a consumer, secular holiday. You can thank stores and manufacturers that count on people giving until it hurts ones pocketbook. Many stores count on these sales to push them over the top profitability-wise so they can stay in business. Just remember why they call the day after Thanksgiving Day, Black Friday.
Christmas predates the Christian religion by millennia, at least the traditions we normally use to celebrate it. Itâs basically a combination of Saturnalia and Yule, both of which celebrated the winter solstice with feasts, exchange of gifts, decorating homes with evergreen plants, and good old fashioned drunken revelry. When the Christian Church took over most of Europe they couldnât ban the celebrations because they were so popular, so they settled for renaming the holiday and making up a story about it being Jesusâ birthday. When the Pilgrims first began settling in North America they actually banned Christmas (as anything other than a special church service,) and well into the history of our nation celebrating it was punishable by fine. It wasnât until the late 1800âs and early 1900âs when the uptick of European immigration brought more people who actually celebrated Christmas and it became cemented as part of our modern culture.
BE THIS GUY over 1 year ago
Other religions were doing it before Christianity. Diwali in Hinduism is the celebration of the new fiscal year, at which time a lot of money is spent on jewelry.
codycab over 1 year ago
November 26th had Calvin say âsix more days until Christmas.â Today itâs, âChristmas is just around the corner!â
jmworacle over 1 year ago
Itâs now eight weeks.
David Wright Premium Member over 1 year ago
December 25 is the old Anglo-Saxon pagan midwinter festival of âgeolâ (pronounced âyuleâ), following âmodranihtâ (mothersâ night). Christianity stole it on the basis that if people were going to have a feast anyway, they might as well do it for Jesus. rather than Woden.
californiamonty over 1 year ago
Oh, Hobbes, you naif. Yes, other religions have picked up on that. For example, when I visited Malaysia, I discoverd Hari Raya (as they call the first day after Ramadan) is basically Christmas and Valentine Day rolled into one.
snsurone76 over 1 year ago
When I was a kid, I used to get presents for Hannukah. Of course, I donât any more, but itâs still my favorite holiday because of its meaning: the victory of an oppressed people over a dictatorial tyrant.
orinoco womble over 1 year ago
They have, Hobbes. Oh, they have. Even I get âEid moneyâ from a friend who lives in London; an online friend Iâve chatted with for years but never actually met.
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member over 1 year ago
And for every other six year old, Calvin. Hobbes, being the more mature of the two, is more spiritually spiritual than commercially spiritual.
The Reader Premium Member over 1 year ago
I donât get feeling spiritual until I see them under the tree.
jagedlo over 1 year ago
Ah, the religion of young CalvinismâŠ
ladykat Premium Member over 1 year ago
Calvin is 6; most children that age are into blatant consumerism.
Ray Rappisi Jr over 1 year ago
My religion IS consumerism
PoodleGroomer over 1 year ago
Does anybody feel like walking around Mecca for a few days?
Redd Panda over 1 year ago
I like Boxing Day myself. The stores are blissfully free of that obnoxious music.
kab2rb over 1 year ago
For children Christmas should be here sooner, break from school and yes Calvin is right, lots of gifts of toys.
rshive over 1 year ago
Calvin would always seem to need a wagon repair kit.
Will_Scarlet over 1 year ago
Presents under the tree might be consumerist heaven. I currently work in a thrift outlet where regifted Christmas stuff gets delivered by the boxful multiple times each day. The junk stretches from one end of the storage room to the next. Thatâs what Iâd call consumerist hell.
Solomon J. Behala Premium Member over 1 year ago
Eh, weâre getting around to it, Hobbes. Check out all the new Hannukah merch every year. And donât get me started on Passover hotels.
Sherlock5 over 1 year ago
Based on his behavior, I donât know why he expects loads of loot. I guess itâs because his parents still love the little rapscallion, despite his behavior.
Sir Isaac over 1 year ago
Anthropologists view such acts as Christmas commercialism as demonstrations of a societyâs underlying wealth. It helps us be prepared for activities such as war or other survival necessities, i.e. we have money to throw away.
BearsDown Premium Member over 1 year ago
Pray to Almighty Mammon!
DM2860 over 1 year ago
Hanukkah has. It used to not be associated with presents but it is now.
The Wolf In Your Midst over 1 year ago
Remember, folks: Just 380 online shopping days until Christmas 2024! Buy now!
hoot1 over 1 year ago
BWâŠregardless of when this was originally pennedâŠitâs a timeless irony. Just perfect tooning.
John Jorgensen over 1 year ago
Only one month?
Angry Indeed Premium Member over 1 year ago
It isnât the religions that made it into a consumer, secular holiday. You can thank stores and manufacturers that count on people giving until it hurts ones pocketbook. Many stores count on these sales to push them over the top profitability-wise so they can stay in business. Just remember why they call the day after Thanksgiving Day, Black Friday.
mistercatworks over 1 year ago
Just put stock certificates for toy companies in the stockings and be done with it. :)
g04922 over 1 year ago
Love Hobbesâ observation about other cultures/religions not commercializing the season.
willie_mctell over 1 year ago
âRelations sparing no expenseâll send some useless old utensil, like a matching pen and pencil, just the thing I need, how nice.ââTom Lehrer
BiggerNate91 over 1 year ago
Commercialism has truly taken over the world.
BeBadenov Premium Member over 1 year ago
Donât forget the obligatory âwar on Christmasâ hallucinations.
christelisbetty over 1 year ago
AKA Capitalism
dflak over 1 year ago
Happy Hannukah! Not only is it commercial but it involved gambling. Anyone up for a game of dreidels?
yangeldf over 1 year ago
Christmas predates the Christian religion by millennia, at least the traditions we normally use to celebrate it. Itâs basically a combination of Saturnalia and Yule, both of which celebrated the winter solstice with feasts, exchange of gifts, decorating homes with evergreen plants, and good old fashioned drunken revelry. When the Christian Church took over most of Europe they couldnât ban the celebrations because they were so popular, so they settled for renaming the holiday and making up a story about it being Jesusâ birthday. When the Pilgrims first began settling in North America they actually banned Christmas (as anything other than a special church service,) and well into the history of our nation celebrating it was punishable by fine. It wasnât until the late 1800âs and early 1900âs when the uptick of European immigration brought more people who actually celebrated Christmas and it became cemented as part of our modern culture.