``If they would rather die,'' said Scrooge, ``they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population.” – “A Christmas Carol”
Dear Santa,
I’m sorry I haven’t written in a very long time. First, I
want to thank you for George – that’s what I named the little mechanical dachshund
you brought me in 1972, when we lived in that pretty house on South Joslin
Court in Denver. We even had a fireplace for you! Remember?
You brought me some really nice gifts over the years, but I
especially cherished George because I couldn’t have a real dog. I never got to
show you my appreciation because right after that, my cousin Freddie told me
there was no Santa Claus. So I never wrote you again.
Of course, I’ve since found out that Freddie was mistaken.
“Santa Claus” is just a moniker; you’re really Saint Nikolaos of Myra, and you were born in what is now Turkey in 270 AD. You’re probably
the world’s most famous Orthodox Christian
that nobody knows is Orthodox. (You’re in good company, with Telly Savalas, George Stephanopoulos, Nadia Comaneci and
Nikola Tesla. But I digress.)
Anyway, “Santa,” they made you a saint because of the
wonderful things you did for the poor – like secretly putting gold coins in
children’s shoes as the family slept. I can’t imagine what it would have been
like to have been poor back in the third century.
I suppose that if you weren’t
lucky enough to be the king, you were most likely destitute. There was no
Social Security, no food stamps, no Medicaid. The children worked hard along
with their parents, not for spending money but for sustenance. I bet that your
gold coins prevented more than one family from starving.
So you’ve been traveling around the world ever since then,
giving gifts to good children (and to bad ones as well!). And you’ve witnessed
a lot of progress in the last 1,700 years. With electricity and plumbing and
automobiles, most people are a lot more comfortable now than they were when you
first started out.
But we still have poor people. And that’s why I’m writing
you this letter, after all these years. I’m really lucky – there’s nothing that
I need. I have enough clothes and food, and I have a house to live in. So you
don’t have to bring me anything. But I’m worried about the people around me.
I don’t know if you read the newspaper or watch the news –
I’m not sure how the reception is at the North Pole. But lately, all over the
world, complicated political and economic systems are breaking down. People who
used to have clothes and food and houses are losing them. People who worked
hard all their lives are worried about their futures. People are protesting,
and some people are getting hurt.
There was no “middle class” in third-century Turkey, but
nowadays the middle class is a big deal. Middle class people aren’t rich, but
they have everything they need – and a few things they want. Well, the middle class is disappearing. Here in the United States, the most recent census
showed that half of us are “poor or low-income.”
There’s a big problem, though – a lot of the poor, at least
here in America,
don’t “seem” poor. The Heritage Foundation says that the poor aren’t REALLY poor, because most of them have TVs and coffee makers. (I was at Goodwill last week
and saw a TV for $10 and a coffee maker for $5 … just sayin’). The folks at
Freedom Works think that unemployment insurance – which pays a fraction of what
workers’ salaries used to be – keeps people from looking for work. The New York Times reported that the average job-seeker today searches nine months before finding work … which seems like a long time for a family to live on (at most) $1,320 a month, when the average mortgage payment is $1,295. Throw in health insurance, a car payment, and
stuff like electricity and food, and … well, you can do the math.
This letter is getting really long, and I know you only have
another couple of days to prepare for your big flight on Christmas Eve. But I
just wanted to make sure you knew this. The people struggling these days don’t
live like people did in your day, but if they can’t pay for medical treatment,
or the bank is taking their house away, or their local food pantry has run out
of supplies, they’re poor. Don’t you think…?
And come to think of it, with some people in the U.S. wanting to get rid of Social Security, food
stamps and Medicaid, as well as child labor regulations … well, we might wind
up a lot like third century Turkey
anyway.
Merry Christmas!
Love, Teresa
1 comment:
صيانة افران بمكة
صيانة افران بالمدينة المنورة
صيانة افران بنجران
صيانة افران بالطائف
صيانة افران بابها
صيانة افران بخميس مشيط
صيانة افران بجدة
شركة جلي بلاط و رخام بخميس مشيط
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