Greed vs Lust on Christmas

So this guy created a Paris Hilton Christmas display. Which while tacky, I find kind of amusing. However, I am not really looking for the merits of a Paris Hilton display or not. What I want to discuss is a comment from the end of the article.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/12/09/paris.christmas.ap/index.html

Why is it more appropriate to teach children greed, rather than lust on Christmas?

Erek

Do we have to choose?

I think it’s sad that you think Santa=Greed.

I like to think that Santa represents the home, and happiness, and joy, and a belief that people can get nice things.

Yeah, I think that pretty much sums it up. I don’t synonymize Santa with Christmas the way you do. I think Christmas is about home and happiness and joy. Santa is just about stuff. Sure its a concept of generosity, but there is the reality to contend with. People ain’t pistol whipping one another for X-Boxes for no reason, they are doing it to make sure that Santa brings what the kid really really wants.

Erek

I think we should tell our children the truth: There really is a Santa Claus. And he really does know if you’ve been bad or good. And he has this really mean side nobody ever talks about. Good night! :smiley:

I guess it depends on * where * you hang the stockings with care. And whose stockings they are.

BrainGlutton Yeah, but children don’t want to know about Satan’s Clause, they wait until they are adults and contemplating suicide because they overspent trying to assuage the greed of the voracious host.

And I don’t think we need to choose between Greed and Lust. Of course they are one and the same, both are an intense desire for something, it’s only what that is different. Unfortunately too many people give their greedy little monsters whatever they want, the kids that whine and plead and beg are the ones that get their parents to kill for their Roboraptor. At least the Roboraptor bites. However, its the kids that have the parents who are most likely to step on toes for an X-Box that are the ones who more desperately need the lump of coal.

Erek

Quote:
Ron Raffonelli, 65, said he would be upset if his young grandchildren came to associate Christmas with naked woman. He’d prefer the kids to think of Santa Claus.
(Oh, CNN editors: If you’re going to paraphrase someone, that’s a good opportunity to use correct grammar, not that your mosquito-on-crack mentality thought of that or anything).

Nice Freudian slip, there, Mr. Raffonelli. She’s not actually naked in the display, FWIW.

Can we choose others of the Seven Deadlies?
Considering Christmas Dinner, maybe Gluttony would be more appropriate. Or Sloth.

This may come as a bit of a surprise to you, but Christmas is about giving, not receiving.

There’s a difference.

Didn’t the early church deliberately replace Saturnalia on the calender with Christmas?

As we say in the Church of the Subgenius, “The difference between Hell and Heaven is which end of the pitchfork you’re on!” :smiley:

Paris Hilton clothed =/= naked woman
Paris Hilton =/= lust (at least in my book, she don’t - more sloth if anything)
Santa Claus =/= Christmas
Santa Claus =/= greed
different type of decoration =/= teach

Damn, this article is a worthless piece of fluff, why do an OP on it?

Maybe. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturnalia:

I could be wrong, but I’m guessing there was some contemplation of Paris giving something to a sugarplum. :wink:

Midwinter, midsummer, and the equinoxes have been festivals in Eurasia since time immemorial. Saturnalia / Christmas, Easter / Lupercalia, it’s the same difference: newer religions co-opt older ones. The autumn equinox has ever been the harvest festival. Christians have Lent, Moslems have Ramadan, the Babylonians had Tammuz. One can draw similarities between the classical Greek Persephone and the Hebrew Esther and the Babylonian Ishtar and thus midwinter and the giving of gifts. And so on.

I’m too full o’ sloth to give a fuck.

“I’m very well acquainted with the seven deadly sins
I keep a busy schedule trying to fit them in
I’m proud to be a glutton and I don’t have time for sloth
I’m greedy and I’m angry and I don’t care who I cross”

Warren Zevon, “Mr. Bad Example”