A Comment About

Cheer Up — It’s Christmas!

December 25, 2008 - 12:40 am - by Elizabeth Scalia
Bad
2008-12-25 19:59:32

I think you’re a little confused here. Us non-believers most certainly can appreciate the power of a nice hopeful story and myth. The Christian story wouldn’t have survived so long or been so compelling if it didn’t have appeal and insight to things human beings are concerned about. But it’s the myopic obsession with this story and this story alone and singular, somehow above and beyond all other wonderful and hopeful stories, and somehow that it’s the MOST universally insightful possible story that we find sort of baffling. The world has had a heck of a lot of other important insights and realizations that are worth knowing too.

And I find it deeply silly that someone can claim both to be a majority and a victim at the same time: all while accusing others of being pathetic exploiters of victimhood status. I’m sorry, but just because not quite everyone on the planet happens to think that your beliefs are the most important and most insightful doesn’t mean that you’re under any sort of threat from anything other than maybe not feeling as important as you’d hoped.