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[ - ] deleted 12 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 02:33:33 ago (+12/-0)*

deleted

[ - ] puppy528 3 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 03:32:31 ago (+3/-0)

The most recent one only had the chanukah zombie and Kwanzaabot (and Robo Santa). No mention at all of Robonukah.

[ - ] deleted 2 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 10:31:56 ago (+2/-0)

deleted

[ - ] DivineLight2 1 point 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 08:29:56 ago (+1/-0)

I came to say this. Not seen the new reboot, any good or like the last reboot and too overly faggy/libshit? It was always libshit, but more subtle and less present.

[ - ] CoronaHoax 5 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 06:53:39 ago (+5/-0)

I have no obligation to the shit that comes out of Hollywood any more than I do the shit that comes out of China.

[ - ] texasblood 3 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 06:45:32 ago (+4/-1)

Why force shit.
Christ was never in that pagen holiday.
But you insist on supporting/forcing it anyway.
F.O.C.U.S

[ - ] NoRefunds 2 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 08:04:00 ago (+2/-0)

Yeah Jesus wasn't born on Dec 25,that whole thing represents the winter solstice, consumerism, pagan symbols and the reemergence of the sun. Kikes even wrote most of the Christmas songs as well. Jesus wouldn't want people, especially kids, thirsting for presents the way they do. The only thing that is christ like for Christmas is how everyone treats each other and the love of family. But as for as expecting kikes to respect any of those things, you got another thing coming.

[ - ] BulletStopper 3 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 02:27:31 ago (+3/-0)

Merry Christmas then. And a happy Xanukkah.

[ - ] Belmont 2 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 04:23:15 ago (+2/-0)*

Jeremiah 10 1611 KJV

1 Heare ye the word which the Lord speaketh vnto you, O house of Israel.

2 Thus sayeth the Lord, Learne not the way of the heathen, and be not dismayed at the signes of heauen, for the heathen are dismayed at them.

3 For the customes of the people are vaine: for one cutteth a tree out of the forrest (the worke of the handes of the workeman) with the axe.

4 They decke it with siluer and with golde, they fasten it with nayles, and with hammers that it mooue not.

5 They are vpright as the palme tree, but speake not: they must needes bee borne, because they cannot goe: be not afraid of them, for they cannot doe euil, neither also is it in them to doe good.5

[ - ] Thyhorrorcosmic103 2 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 04:17:05 ago (+2/-0)

Just so you know, using X (chi) to represent christ goes all the way back to the beginning of Christianity.

[ - ] Bonanza 1 point 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 12:03:04 ago (+1/-0)

FWIW, when Hulu first came out they were offering free trial promotional subscriptions (maybe still are). I decided to give it a whirl, and practically all of their content was faggot movies, faggot movies, and more faggot movies. Needless to say I didn't renew my subscription, and it doesn't look like I'll be signing up again anytime soon.

[ - ] big_fat_dangus 0 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 06:22:46 ago (+1/-1)

Christmas specials always suck.

[ - ] deleted -1 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 19:13:21 ago (+0/-1)

deleted

[ - ] doginventer -1 points 8 monthsAug 30, 2023 06:40:41 ago (+0/-1)


Christmas in America becomes battleground
https://www.wnd.com/2002/12/16242/
... The Catholic Encyclopedia states, '"the word for Christmas in late Old English is Cristes Maesse, the Mass of Christ, first found in 1038, and Cristes-messe, in 1131." It explains "Christmas was not among the earliest festivals of the Church," pointing out "first evidence of the feast is from Egypt" around A.D. 200 with attempts by theologians to assign not only the year of Christ's birth, but also the precise date. Historians agree that through the subsequent centuries, traditions from ancient pagan (non-Christian) religions became intertwined with those of Christianity, and depending upon one's point of view, either paganism became Christianized, or Christianity became paganized. In 1644, the English Parliament outlawed the holiday, compelling shops to be open that day, and condemning plum puddings and mince pies as "heathen." In his Pulitzer Prize finalist, "The Battle for Christmas," historian Stephen Nissenbaum at the University of Massachusetts documents the American development of the holiday now ensconced in popular culture. "In New England, for the first two centuries of white settlement," writes Nissenbaum, "most people did not celebrate Christmas. In fact, the holiday was systematically suppressed by Puritans during the colonial period and largely ignored by their descendants. It was actually illegal to celebrate Christmas in Massachusetts between 1659 and 1681 (the fine was five shillings). Only in the middle of the nineteenth century did Christmas gain legal recognition as an official public holiday in New England." Nissenbaum agrees with other historians that the first recorded observance since the New Testament recounted Christ's birth took place hundreds of years after Jesus' resurrection. "It was only in the fourth century that the Church officially decided to observe Christmas on Dec. 25. And this date was not chosen for religious reasons but simply because it happened to mark the approximate arrival of the winter solstice, an event that was celebrated long before the advent of Christianity. The Puritans were correct when they pointed out – and they pointed it out often – that Christmas was nothing but a pagan festival covered with a Christian veneer." Christmas in America saw huge growth during the 19th century, starting with Washington Irving's 1820 book "The Keeping of Christmas at Bracebridge Hall." A week before Christmas in 1834, Charles Dickens published "A Christmas Carol," and in 1860, American illustrator Thomas Nast created Father Christmas, also known as Santa Claus, based on European stories of St. Nicholas, the patron saint of children. ...
... Garner Ted Armstrong "None of the apostles of Christ ever heard of the term; not one of them ever celebrated Christ's birthday," writes Armstrong in his booklet "Christmas ... The Untold Story." "The words Christmas, holly wreath, mistletoe, Rudolph, Santa Claus and Christmas tree do not appear anywhere in the Bible." ...
... "And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the Lord, and forgat the Lord their God, and served Baalim and the groves."(Judges 3:7) "For the Lord shall smite Israel ... because they have made their groves, provoking the Lord to anger."(1 Kings 14:15) "For they also built them high places, and images, and groves, on every high hill, and under every green tree." (1 Kings 14:23) In the 1800s, Alexander Hislop, a noted historian of antiquity, examined the origins of customs such as the Christmas tree and date of celebration. Writing in "The Two Babylons," Hislop maintains the practice derives from the worship of pagan deities. The Christmas tree, now so common among us, was equally common in pagan Rome and pagan Egypt. In Egypt that tree was the palm tree; in Rome it was the fir; the palm tree denoting the pagan Messiah. ... The mother of Adonis, the sun god and great mediatorial divinity, was mystically said to have been changed into a tree, and when in that state to have brought forth her divine son. If the mother was a tree, the son must have been [recognized] as the "Man the branch." And this entirely accounts for the putting of the yule log into the fire on Christmas Eve, and the appearance of the Christmas tree the next morning. ... Therefore, the 25th of December, the day that was observed at Rome as the day when the victorious god reappeared on earth, was held at the Natalis invicti solis, "The birthday of the unconquered sun." Now the yule log is the dead stock of Nimrod, deified as the sun god, but cut down by his enemies; the Christmas tree is Nimrod redivivus ? the slain god come to life again. ...