Yes. People who are genuinely awful and the furthest thing from Christian railing on it is about as surprising as it sounds. The comedy news shows got it right. This Nontroversy is the ramblings of a complete d-bag (he looks like one, he has the d-beard and everything and looks like Nega-Kevin James) who was just desperate to seek attention by picking an easy target for the 45-70 year olds that use facebook to whine about and for the obvious "news" outlet to jump on. And it worked. He has all these awful people on his side and there's no doubt they'll scoop him up for a contributor position on...well...the obvious place.
Still, the thing that bugs me is the thing is still red and green. And it's Starbucks. I just absolutely hate Starbucks, and the only time they were of use to me was when they had those finger puppets impaled on candy sticks (we all know the Muppet ones, but they also had some nice Looney Tunes ones). Other than that, never cared, never liked them... red and green cups are still cashing in off of the Christmas season. I never liked this whole "War on Christmas" thing because it's all commercial no matter who's trying to give it a religious slant. There's nothing to sell on religious days of fasting and reflection. Not to mention that Christmas as we know it is totally American a holiday. By which we took customs from other countries, made it our own, and made it bigger louder and not quite as good. But that's another thing for another time.
Now the thing that I'm more annoyed with is there's obviously an unspoken war on Thanksgiving waged by Christmas profiteers. And like I said, this isn't even new. Before the day settled into the fourth Thursday in November, retailers were pushing to make the holiday earlier so there would be more time for Christmas shopping. I forget exactly which president did this in what year and settled on a major screw you to the retail industry at the time making it so late in the month, but it was much earlier than we think. Now, I get the idea of pushing the gift giving season earlier so they can spread out the time to shop for those who don't really have the money to blow all at once. That's the same logic that starts back to school shopping the second kids get out of classes. Of course with school shopping, that one's kinda necessary... And sure, Thanksgiving doesn't sell anything but plates, food, and tacky decorations. But I like the period in between Halloween and Thanksgiving as a nice pause between holidays, since there isn't the rush between Thanksgiving and Christmas.