Has there ever been a major holiday more focused on materialism than the modern American Christmas? This year, Americans are planning to spend an average of 830 dollars on Christmas gifts, which represents a jump of 110 dollars over the average of 720 dollars last year. But have our incomes gone up accordingly? Of course not. In fact, real median household income in the United States has been experiencing a steady long-term decline. So in order to fund all of our Christmas spending, we have got to go into even more debt. We love to pull out our credit cards and spend money that we do not have on lots of cheap, useless stuff made on the other side of the world by workers making slave labor wages. We do the same thing year after year, and most of us have grown accustomed to the endless cycle of growing debt. In fact, one Pew survey found that approximately 70 percent of all Americans believe that “debt is a necessity in their lives”. But then we have to work our fingers to the bone to try to make the payments on all of that debt, not realizing that debt systematically impoverishes us. It may be hard to believe, but if you have a single dollar in your pocket and no debt, you have a greater net worth than 25 percent of all Americans. I know that sounds crazy, but it is true.
Overall, when you add up all forms of debt (consumer, business, local government, state government and federal government), Americans are more than 60 trilliondollars in debt.
Let that sink in for a bit.
40 years ago, that number was sitting at about 3 trillion dollars.
We have been on the greatest debt binge in the history of the world. Even though we were “the wealthiest, most prosperous nation on the entire planet”, we always had to have more. We just kept on borrowing and borrowing and borrowing from the future until we completely destroyed it.
And we still haven’t learned anything. Instead, this Christmas season we will be partying like it’s 2007…
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Or not. The only thing stopping us from becoming a moral and prudent nation is us.
David DeGerolamo
I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.
Thomas Jefferson
It’s sad that we’ve taken something spiritual and twisted it into a materialistic, money-grubbing, sales event. The same goes for Easter. Truly sad!
It’s all about the Benjamins, now. Pathetic!
Is that “average” expenditure a mean, a median, or a mode?
Yes, the secularization of Christmas has had some nasty effects, but if gift-giving (“Spending money we don’t have for presents we dislike for people we can’t stand” — Fr. Francis X. Pizzarelli) is the worst of it, we might survive. What I’d like is to see the gift-giving custom re-embedded in its original matrix: the gifts of the three Magi to the Christ Child.
I took it to be an average. A mean with a standard deviation would be interesting. However, we all are watching other “factors” that will impact our Christmas cheer.
How many Magi?
Weren’t there three? Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar? (The “other wise man” is a fictional character, as far as anyone knows.)
The Book of Matthew does not give a number of wise men. Tradition says three, some accounts give more. In the end, it does not matter: wise men came to worship the Lord.