If you feel like America starts celebrating the holidays too early every year, you're not alone. A poll published Tuesday by PollPosition.com
found that 61 percent of Americans think we celebrate the crowded
end-of-year holiday calendar--Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa--too
early.
According to the Dec. 4 telephone survey
of 1,029 registered American voters, 27 percent said they were fine
with the early-celebration status quo. Twelve percent had no opinion on
the matter.
Of those surveyed, 68 percent of Americans 65 and older felt the
current schedule of holiday revelry is premature, while just 20 percent
of that group does not. (Perhaps that why there's a Festivus for the rest of us.)
Among younger Americans--those between the ages of 18 and
29--opinions were split: 42 percent said said we celebrate the holidays
too early, 44 percent said we do not and 14 percent had no opinion.
Men and women were more or less split, too. Sixty-one percent of men
said holiday celebrations start too early, and 26 percent said they do
not; 60 percent of women surveyed said celebrations start too early, and
28 percent say they do not.
The push for early holiday celebration appears to have been the reason a man in Decatur, Ga., was arrested earlier this week for using a shotgun near a mall to gather Christmas decorations.
"[He] was firing into the trees in an attempt to get mistletoe out,"
DeKalb, Ga., police spokeswoman Mekka Parish told a local television
station."To decorate his home for Christmas."
The man, Richard Robinson, was charged with illegally discharging a
weapon and reckless conduct. According to the police report, Robinson
"said he does this every year, but never in the mall parking lot. The
suspect was surprised he was getting arrested."
Other area residents were surprised, too.
"A shotgun is the quickest and most efficient way" to retrieve
mistletoe from treetop height, Richard Crabbe, a photographer for
11Alive, told the station. "Unless you want to climb the tree and pick
it."
No comments:
Post a Comment