Veterans Administration Turned Away Christmas Cards, Censored Choir

Christmas may be over, but, as we’ve already reported once this year, the War on Christmas isn’t.

Last December, Kelly Shackelford, President and CEO of Liberty Institute in Texas, wrote an opinion-editorial titled, “Yes, Virginia, there really is a war on Christmas.”

In it Shackelford outlined examples of attempts to censor Christmas celebrations around the country. Most of this censorship involves removing the religious elements from Christmas.

Now Todd Starnes and the American Family Association are reporting some disturbing news related to the Veterans Administration. According to Starnes, last month the VA

  • Censored a school choir who came to sing at the VA hospital in Augusta, Georgia, because their Christmas songs included the words “Christmas” and “Jesus;”
  • Told American Legion volunteers they could not hand out gifts to veterans if the wrapping paper included the words “Merry Christmas;”
  • Turned away at least one Alabama woman distributing Christmas gifts to veterans because the wrapping paper she used included the words “Merry Christmas;” and
  • Rejected handwritten Christmas cards from Dallas schoolchildren because the cards contained phrases like “Merry Christmas” and “God Bless You.”

This situation is just bizarre. As we have written over and over again, Christmas is a federal holiday; our state and federal governments recognize it; our courts have ruled time and again there is nothing wrong with that.

With that in mind, why turn away schoolchildren who want to honor our veterans with Christmas songs or cards? Why reject Christmas gifts? It simply does not make sense.

Read more from AFA here.

Read Starnes’ column here.

Those Troubling New Year’s Resolutions

Most people make them.  Few people keep them.  Whether kept or not, those New Yea’rs resolutions are, well, troubling.

Lose weight!  Get organized!  Save money!  Eat healthy!  Will someone please tell me why resolutions have to be so unpleasant!  So troubling!  Even happy ones like having more fun, getting more rest, and spending more time with friends still seem like another item tacked onto our growing to-do lists.

A few years ago someone wrote a book about “margin.”  The author argued most Americans book their lives at 120% of what they have time for. Instead, he proposed that we operate at 80% and have time and energy to spare. Not a bad idea!  In fact, maybe, I’ll make that my New Year’s resolution for 2014.  On second thought, figuring out how to do 40% less and still get everything done might be more trouble that it’s worth.

I suppose that brings me back to my point: New Year’s resolutions really are troubling.

U.S. Supreme Court Puts a Stay on Federal Judge’s Ruling

Last month a federal District Court judge issued a ruling against Utah’s ban on same-sex marriage, resulting in the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples in that state.

Today, however, the U.S. Supreme Court placed a stay on that ruling, meaning marriage in Utah will remain one man to one woman while the lawsuit over Utah’s marriage amendment progresses.

Family Research Council President Tony Perkins summed up the implications of this decision in a statement today, saying, “The Supreme Court has today signaled that it will not allow state laws defining marriage to be set aside by a lone judge without a careful consideration of the issues involved.”