Donald Trump, one
of the GOP candidates for the Republican nomination, has weighed in
on the Starbucks red cup crisis and it really grinds my gears. You
would think that a GOP candidate would have better things to do with
his time then comment on something as silly as a red cup. “If I get
elected we'll all be saying Merry Christmas again, I can tell you
that much.” “No more Christmas at Starbucks.” At least he's an
honest candidate, albeit a bigoted and short sighted one.
What was the
original complaint? A video that went viral the day before. The
complaint, “Starbucks removed Christmas from their cups because
they hate Jesus.” ... Thinking about the designs of Starbucks' past
I remember them being cluttered with snowflakes, ornaments, maybe
trees, and that's a big maybe. General holiday/winter themes
decorated the cups like garland. Let me make that clear. They erased
snowflakes not a giant picture of the Messiah off their cups.
So why has this
become such a big deal? If you ask my father it's because Christmas
is American. He's partially correct. Many of the traditions we
associate with the Holiday started in America, but it wasn't always a
prominent American holiday. In fact, when the Puritans came to this
country, they banned Christmas. “The concept of holy days implies
some days are not holy.” It did not become a national holiday until 1870 long after the
days of our fore fathers.
Where to begin with the list of people who made Christmas the grand celebration it is today? Let's start with
Washington Irving. In response to political and socio-economic
turmoil that plagued the US in the early 19th century, he wrote a work of fiction depicting Christmas as the joyous, warm
hearted holiday we know today. Back in Europe there was the old carnival that took place each year where the
wealthy would switch roles with the poor for a day back in Europe. They would have to serve their servants, lick their boots, it was a day of heathenism. This day was designed to keep the masses from revolting.
Instead of keeping that tradition in America, Irving created the myth of a holiday that brought people together across all boundaries not by switching ranks, but by celebrating “ancient traditions.” These traditions brought together the rich and the poor. Christmas was a magical time where good will existed towards your fellow man. Peace, humility, and kindness prevailed. Christmas existed to quell the wave of mass discontent of poor working conditions and large social and fiscal gaps in America. Many believe that Irving actually created Christmas as we know it today with his piece.
Instead of keeping that tradition in America, Irving created the myth of a holiday that brought people together across all boundaries not by switching ranks, but by celebrating “ancient traditions.” These traditions brought together the rich and the poor. Christmas was a magical time where good will existed towards your fellow man. Peace, humility, and kindness prevailed. Christmas existed to quell the wave of mass discontent of poor working conditions and large social and fiscal gaps in America. Many believe that Irving actually created Christmas as we know it today with his piece.
The second part of Christmas, the myth of Santa Clause. Well, I should say Sinterklass. We all know he is a depiction of St. Nick, the artistry behind his works looks a lot like the green man surrounded in wreaths and garlands though. Doesn't it? People would always take myths or iconic images and transform them to serve a purpose. In this case the familiar iconography helped people to feel comfortable putting a face that they recognized to the man who came into their homes once a year. Scientists believe that you remember every face you see, even those you only glance at in passing, so all those random faces you see in your dream you have glanced at them once before.
Santa Claus himself was not brought to us by any of our fore fathers. He was given to us by the Dutch. The Dutch in America celebrated St. Nicholas' day each year. They would wait for gifts in stockings or shoes. America ran with the idea of St. Nicholas. Clement Clark Moore (1823) The Night Before Christmas, Santa Claus drawn by Thomas Nash (1862), and Yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus by Francis Church to name a few. Christians would soon adopt these traditions to Christmas day on December 25th, or as it was before that, the solstice.
Santa Claus himself was not brought to us by any of our fore fathers. He was given to us by the Dutch. The Dutch in America celebrated St. Nicholas' day each year. They would wait for gifts in stockings or shoes. America ran with the idea of St. Nicholas. Clement Clark Moore (1823) The Night Before Christmas, Santa Claus drawn by Thomas Nash (1862), and Yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus by Francis Church to name a few. Christians would soon adopt these traditions to Christmas day on December 25th, or as it was before that, the solstice.
Everything we know about Christmas traditions today
started in the 19th
century. They are new traditions and none, (minus moving all
the other traditions to December 25th)
had anything to do with Jesus. They were just a way to calm the social unrest in early America. Alright, then let's bring it home.
Starbucks
released a statement about it's cups. Starbucks, “wanted to usher
in the holidays with a purity of design that welcomes all our
stories.” “Embracing the simplicity and the quietness of it.”
Knowing the history of our
current traditions I couldn't agree more with their vision. I find
peace in the plain red cups uncluttered with winter paraphernalia. I
believe there is a quiet sanctuary as I stare at my pure red cup that
encompasses the the desire to bring people together from all walks of
life. It, like Christmas, breaks the barriers of religion, class, and
economic disparities if only for an hour. It truly embraces the
reasons behind the tradition. So I completely support their decision
to have pure red cups.
Also
as a last side note. Howard Schulz is Jewish… perhaps instead of
throwing him to the lions for removing snow flakes, which clearly
means he hates Jesus, you should thank him for the social correctness
of including Christmas Blend and celebrating traditions that are not
his own with all of us. Just a thought.
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