Hated Christmas. Catholicism on Censored

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Hated Christmas. Catholics on censored

24.12.2025 Leszek Szymowskitime/hate-God-birth-Catholic-on-censored/

More and more left-wing countries have fought the most crucial Catholic holidays.

I am the individual enemy of God.”
W. I. Lenin

As Advent began, and Polish Catholics began preparing spiritually and familyly for Christmas, Dantej scenes took place at Abotak. Protesters against the activities of the abortion facility pro-life activists have fallen the object of a series of attacks by aporter. First, a female associated with the Abortive Dream squad came out of the facility (this was the name of 3 activists offering women the chance to "break up" even against the law), she flunked the protesters with acid of unknown composition.

"During the anti-abortion picket on Wiejska Street on Wednesday 3.12.2025, a female came to the prolifters with a bucket and poured out an unidentified viscous liquid on volunteers – reported Kaja Godek, the head of the Life and household Foundation. She was detained by the police, but... She was fired very quickly. The boy of a female showering volunteers with buckets He beat up picketing girls – for the attack he chose a minute erstwhile they were alone, without boys nearby. 1 of the contestants pushed the picket, and the another hit his face and smashed her lip. Another man entered the assembly, knocked over the table and smashed the equipment.” To this day, no 1 was responsible.

For comparison, at the end of November the Warsaw police stopped an 18-year-old scout who was accused of spilling before the Sejm (the entrance to Abotak is other the Sejm) of unknown origin of the substance (we wrote about this in the erstwhile edition of “NCz!”). A young man explained that he was accidentally on Wiejska Street due to the fact that he was waiting for his father. So his father was besides detained. Both were transported to the police station on Wilcza Street, where they heard the charges. This was at the beginning of Advent, and thus at a peculiar time erstwhile Catholics prepare for Christmas. It's hard to read another than as the signal that Donald Tusk's government policy is headed for.

Discrimination of Catholics

A fewer days ago, the well-known British interior network – Screwfix – was accused of prohibit employees from exhibiting Christmas decorations in places visible to customers. Network staff have been informed that trinkets and baubles must be placed in the backrooms specified as social rooms where customers cannot see them. A directive from the company office caused discontent of employees, especially those arrogant of their Christian identity. 1 of them in a conversation with the journalists “The Sun” admitted that “It was a decision made by the headquarters.” erstwhile asked by the editor of The Sun, Screwfix said that the company is celebrating the vacation season.

“Our employees wear Christmas sweaters and our customers can buy Christmas sweaters and Screwfix socks” She explained. It besides ensured that "as in erstwhile years, our teams can decorate their workrooms". So it turned out that the retailer allowed Christmas celebrations behind the scenes, while at the same time maintaining its commercial space free from Christmas decorations, which seems to be a policy utilized for any time in relation to the workrooms.

Screwfix's network policy is akin to the action taken by the HSBC bank giant, who banned employees in contact with customers wearing Christmas knitted clothing on this Christmas. The bank issued guidelines following the emergence of concerns that workers wearing seasonal outfits may not meet professional standards, especially during delicate talks specified as discussing financial difficulties or dealing with matters of mourning.

Forbidden holiday

This year, the celebration of Klaasohm was besides banned on Borkum Island. It is simply a somewhat less-known Christmas tradition, which has been cultivated in Germany, in an area close to the border with the Netherlands, for almost 200 years. The festival of Klaasohm on the island of Borkum, located close the German border with the Netherlands on the North Sea coast, dates back to the 1930s. It was held on 5 December, on Christmas Eve, besides known as Santa Claus, in honor of the patron saint, who is an inspiration for Santa Claus. Saint Nicholas is celebrated in many Western Christian countries in various ways. In Germany, children put up shoes for the night, which are filled with sweets “by Santa Claus” if the kid has been polite during the last year, or stays in them a stick if the kid has been considered rude. However, on the island of Borkum, located about 250 miles from the East England coast, there is besides a completely different tradition, in which adults are active on the night before a more solemn holiday. Now it's history. What was hindered by left-wing authorities of children celebrating the tradition of Santa Claus – it is unknown.

Hate speech

Also during Advent, Canadian Catholics received a questionable gift from the left-wing government. Mark Carney's office decided to propose a bill that extends the protection against “the speech of hatred”, including by penalising the citation of Bible passages on homosexuality. The C-9 bill was in the Canadian home of Commons on precisely 4 December, that is, on the day of Saint Barbara – it is an additional slap aimed at Christians. LifeSiteNews reports that a government circler has revealed that a liberal government plans to remove spiritual exceptions from Canadian hatred speech laws.

Concerns about the draft Law C-9 caused the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) to condemn the proposed restrictions on quoting spiritual texts. In a letter dated 4 December addressed to Carney, the CCCB powerfully opposed the proposed amendments to draft Law C-9. "The proposed abolition of the “good faith” defence with respect to spiritual texts raises serious concerns," says Bishop Pierre Goudreault, president of the CCCB. "This narrowly formulated exclusion for many years served as a essential warrant that Canadians would not be prosecuted criminally for sincere, truth-seeking expression of convictions, without evil intentions and rooted in long-standing spiritual traditions."

Other conservative MPs expressed concerns about the draft Law C-9. Conservative MP Leslyn Lewis powerfully criticized Carney's plan to criminalize any passages of the Bible as an attack on “Christians”, informing that this was a “dangerous precedent” for Canadian society.

Canadian conservative MP Jamil Jivani, a supporter of the protection of life, stated that the Liberal government of Prime Minister Mark Carney was attacking Christians by proposing a bill that would penalise quoting passages of the Bible. Jivani headed the informal Canadian movement rebelling against the introduction of a fresh law. "The Liberal organization and Mark Carney engage in cultural imperialism, attacking Christians, Muslims and Jews," Jivani wrote in a post published last week, containing a link to the movie on which he speaks against the draft of the C-9 bill in the home of Commons on 4 December.

Jivani made it clear that the government "should not enter churches, mosques and synagogues to advance liberal values or usage the criminal justice strategy to impose liberal values in the private spiritual lives of Canadian citizens". He stated that it was “ precisely what the colonizer would do”, adding: “This is precisely what a cultural imperialist would do.” Jivani noted that looking at “the language of colonists and cultural imperialists”, Canadians must realise that erstwhile liberals “attack scriptures erstwhile they attack the Bible, erstwhile they attack our religions, and erstwhile they effort to justify the introduction of a criminal justice strategy into our places of worship, they effort to take distant what makes us versatile.”

“For them, we are simply an economical factor. We shouldn't have any culture. They think that our lives should have no meaning," he added.

The C-9 bill, the alleged hatred Fighting Act, as LifeSiteNews reports, met with a fierce criticism of constitutional experts who claim that it enables police and government to prosecute people who, in their opinion, violated the "feelings" of others in a "hateful" manner. It remains to be hoped that the C-9 task will not be implemented in Poland.

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