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6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger Helen Louise said...

As to the tree in York, a letter to the local newspaper pointed out how Christmas trees are hardly Christian anyway. I actually get annoyed with people calling Christmas a Pagan festival, since a bit of good honest paganism would, I suspect, prove a welcome antidote to the endless commercialism and tat.

I thought it was that gay men were referred to as "fairies"...

Could all these stories (adopts conspiracy theorist mode) merely be s capitalist plot to get us out to embrace the tat, convinced that by doing so we are showing solidarity with our persecuted brothers and sisters who can't even hang up a bit of tinsel, thanks to Health and Safety and the PC Brigade. Personally I can't wait to get away from Christmas. Even a hokey attempt at multi-culturalism like the tree of many faiths in York seems a lot more genuine than the endless rubbish on the television. I mean, I know it's gotten bad when I'm going misty-eyed over a story about a little girl giving Baby Jesus a rose.

Ahem. End of rant. Good piece as usual. Where do you read all these papers? Do you actually buy them, skim through them as the newsagents (the Express's "Sharia Law in Britain" was amazing, it actually contained the quote "Since there are no bobbies on the beat who can give people a slap on the wrist...") Or perhaps you pick them up in a suitable coffee shop somewhere?

Whatever, I'm glad you do :)

Thursday, 07 December, 2006

Blogger Leo! said...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/christmas2006/story/0,,1967367,00.html

You'd have thought you would have got a link at least...

Friday, 08 December, 2006

Blogger Nick Mazonowicz said...

I work for one of Britain's largest banks at of the main offices. This week we were given out christmas decorations to put up. Following this, someone went one round asking us to be careful about putting them on our monitors in case they fall down the back and cause a fire.
We also asked if we were going to get the three hours off shopping that we sometimes get as a concession. We were told shopping.

So when you see the headline story in the Express saying "NAME OF BANK TELLS STAFF TO TAKE DOWN DECORATIONS AND BANS STAFF FROM CHRISTMAS SHOPPING" remember you read it here first.

Friday, 08 December, 2006

Blogger Phil Masters said...

Any conjurer will tell you that you can only fool an audience that, at some level, wants to be fooled.

"At some level".

I don't really disagree with Andrew's point here, but I think he may be assuming a little too much coherent rationality in people in general and Sun readers in particular. While all this Sun/Express paranoid crap may indeed be dangerous in the long term - it shifts the mid-point of any argument far off in the wrong direction - I think the immediate point of the exercise, for those papers, is that people just like to be outraged. It's probably a universal bad human habit, or it may just be one of those screwed-up UK national sports.

Do people really believe that lefty PC-brigade councils are going round trying to ban Christmas? Actually, I think that people believe anything, everything, and nothing. They just know, at heart, that they have no control over the world at large, and even exerting control over their own lives is too much like hard work, so instead, they talk about all these rotten Others doing stupid, comical, annoying, bad things. Paranoia as a comfort blanket. The Sun and such then encourage and exploit this by talking about PC-brigade-councils, the way that a competent Communist Minister of Propaganda would talk about capitalist infiltrators and subversive anti-proletarian elements.

No, newspapers shouldn't encourage it, and yes, some politicians are doubtless trying to use it for pretty foul ends. But my guess is that the proximate factors are essentially trivial and not very coherent.

Saturday, 09 December, 2006

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

I have a long essay in the offing about "what effect do tabloids actually have". I've had to rather re-think my theory since the Cross Woman versus Veil Lady thing which crossed the line from "disturbingly nutty" into "not even particularly subtle racism".

Paul Daniels' audience do not believe that he has really sawed a living woman in half: the "ethics" of the conjurer amounts to basically three rules: don't lie to the audience; don't pretend that you are have real paranormal powers; and don't tell anyone how your tricks are done. But think of performers such as Doris Stokes, Uri Geller and in a slightly different category, Derren Brown. I take it that very few of the people who watch spirit-mediums and psychics perform really believe that they are hearing messages from the dead or that alien life forms selected a Chosen One and gave him the power to bend spoons. At one level, they know that they are being fooled by a practiced conjurer, and are saying "That's amazing...how could he possibly have bent that spoon without us seeing...how could she possibly have known that in an audience of 5,000 people, there would be someone who knew someone called "John (or possibly Trevor)" who died of a heart attack, or perhaps a stroke." At another level, they think that there is probably something in it, and that there are more things in Heaven than Horatio dreamt of philosophically.

Note, incidentally, that the tabloids pay astonishingly large sums of money to the charlatans who write their "astrology" columns. Do the readers really believe in astrology? No. Do they think that astrology is a load of rubbish and a waste of time? No.
I think that Sun readers know perfectly well that their kids primary school is having a nativity play this year and that their office has a Christmas tree. But I think that they simultaneously believe in a political correctness brigade that has got its arms and legs everywhere.

Incidentally, respectable and possibly even sane people such as the A.N Wilson, Keith Waterhouse, and the Archbishop of York either believe in the political correctness brigade, or else have be co-opted to help circulate the lie.

Saturday, 09 December, 2006

Blogger Phil Masters said...

There's a frankly rather embarrassing feature piece in the Indie today about these "attempts to ban Christmas" things that simultaneously debunks stuff like the Luton and Birmingham councils stories while scrabbling around for actual examples of much the same thing. And, of course, it finds a few; if outrage is a popular hobby, there are plenty of people on the intellectual left as well as the lumpenprole right who engage in it.

I really don't know what the hell that journo thought was the point of the exercise; probably just that examples of other people being a bit stupid are always entertaining, wherever they might be found.

'Sall just a larf, innit?

(By the way, I seem to be generating posts here as from "fromgoogle" as well as under my real name. I'll try and stop this, but anyway, they're both me.)

--
Phil Masters

Saturday, 09 December, 2006