The War Against Christmas: 1776
Posted in General, On This Day on December 26th, 2010 by Eugene Finerman – Be the first to commentOn this day in 1776, George Washington proved himself to be an immoral secular humanist by ruining a British Christmas party. While the Hessian garrison in Trenton, New Jersey was celebrating the birth of Jesus by compressing the 12 days of Christmas into one hangover, the sacrilegious Continental army crossed the Delaware River and attacked. We all know the painting of that Freemason Washington standing in a boat as his men rowed to battle. Of course, truly devout Americans would have walked upon the water.
Yes, the Americans won that day, but the Continental Congress should have disavowed such godless cheating. Why wasn’t George Washington court-martialed for his impiety? In fact, as an apology to Jesus, we should have called the Revolution off.
Boxing Day
This day celebrates the invention of production placement when Arena Sports Productions gave the infant Jesus a pair of authentic Spartacus boxing gloves. There were tentative plans to arrange a fight between Jesus and the future emperor Claudius. However, some doubted whether the palsied, stammering Roman would be a fit match for a carpentry major at Nazareth Community College. It was hoped that Jesus would cure Claudius before beating him up.
As you know, however, that fight never happened. The first real Boxing Day bout occurred between St. Stephen the King of Hungary and St. Stephen the Very Tactless over whose feast day this was. Since this was prior to the Marquess of Queensbury rules, Tactless Steve and Paprika Breath fought it out with poison tipped crosiers. (Fight available on pay-per-view.) And it was a split decision.
(So, do I have a career with Wikipedia?)