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Originally posted by Dequibenzo
Maybe not centuries, but definately in the last one.
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Well, it's been almost two centuries, which qualifies it for a plural in my book...
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It's like Christmas- what once was purely a religious event has now been adapted and integrated into pop culture.
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What Doug said.
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One can have a completely secular christmas- a LOT of people do.
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I know I do...
Last christmas, in Bristol, I think it was (but I could be wrong - somewhere, anyway), the City Council banned the use of the word Christmas on posters and on local news broadcasts, as they said it "did not recognise the modern ethnic diversity of the city". As a replacement, they coined the phrase "Winterval" for the season instead... Now I am a confirmed Agnostic Atheist, but I don't mind calling it Christmas, despite the Religious connotations. Christmas is no longer a term to describe a Christian Festival, but to describe a general cross-cultural celebration of midwinter (not to mention a celebration of Consumerism)... Bristol made the mistake of assuming that everyone who heard the word "Christmas" instantly thought of Christ...
As an interesting side-note, a survey was done a few years back among children of Primary School age. It was a simple survey; the surveyers simply asked the children to say the first thing that came into their heads when they heard the word "Christmas". The results were as follows:
1. Santa Claus
2. Presents
3. Snow (I wonder what Australian children would have answered?)
4. Jesus Christ
This just demonstrates how unreligious Christmas has become...
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By the same token, two people can be married by a judge or a chief of police, anyone who as attained the rank of "Justice of the peace" in the states. On any US citizen's 20th birthday or later, they can send thirty bucks to the state department (it's more in some states, less in others, I think), wait a month for processing, then recieve the liscense to conduct legally binding weddings.
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Yes, but then the US is just weird...
