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WATCH: Trump Spends Christmas Eve Calling U.S. Soldiers

. . .Marking Christmas Eve at Mar-a-Lago Wednesday morning, President Trump held a teleconference with U.S. troops serving around the world.

“You’re tremendous warriors, and we appreciate it so much,” Trump said. “I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a happy new year.”

(Read more from “Trump Spends Christmas Eve Calling U.S. Soldiers” HERE)

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CE0 of Major Company Handwrites Over 9,000 Holiday Cards a Year for His Employees

According to Business Insider, CEO Sheldon Yellen personally hand writes over 9,000 cards a year for his employees — and according to him, all the hard work really pays off in the end.

Yellen is the CEO of Belfor Holdings, a large company that aids in disaster relief efforts and in property restoration. They operate domestically as well as in many foreign countries.

According to Business Insider, Yellen has handwritten a holiday and birthday card to each and every single one of Belfor’s employees since 1985 — before he even became CEO. Today, he is estimated to write over 9,200 of these cards a year.

And it isn’t just birthday and Christmas that provoke handwritten notes from Yellen — he is also scrupulous about anniversary cards, thank you cards, notes to employees who are sick, and many more. The project has become incredibly time consuming for Yellen, who brings large stacks of stationery and writing utensils everywhere he goes, including on planes.

In fact, the work has become so time consuming that Yellen told Business Insider that when his company acquires new business and new companies, he worries less about the company’s financial figures than he does how many new Christmas cards he has to write. (Read more from “CE0 of Major Company Handwrites Over 9,000 Holiday Cards a Year for His Employees” HERE)

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Introducing Target’s ‘Gender Inclusive Gingerbread’ Christmas Sweater

. . .Over at Target, the world-famous Gingerbread Man has been given a makeover in the newly featured “Gender Inclusive Gingerbread” Christmas sweater, available now for the price of $29.99. Behold:

As the image shows, the new “Gender Inclusive Gingerbread” (fill in the blank) has no unique features distinguishing itself from the average Gingerbread Man, and yet, the Target online store literally bills it as the “Gender Inclusive Gingerbread Long Sleeve Sweater” with absolutely no accompanying description as to what classifies it as “gender-inclusive.” It’s as if the very utterance of Gingerbread Man (or even Gingerbread Woman) is in itself offensive. So what do we get? A sweatshirt with a character that looks exactly like the Gingerbread Man but is instead described as gender-inclusive.

Target is also not the only establishment catching wind of this new trend. According to Mirror, a coffee shop called The Tannery in Auckland, New Zealand, decided to put its own brand of gender-inclusive cookie by calling it the “gender-neutral person.” (Read more from “Introducing Target’s ‘Gender Inclusive Gingerbread’ Christmas Sweater” HERE)

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Father Books Six Flights Over Christmas to Spend Time With Daughter, a Flight Attendant

Lots of people travel to spend time with family over the holidays, but one man booked six flights, all over the country, to be with his daughter.

Ohio man Mike Levy wrote a Facebook post that has gone viral, telling the story of a man named Hal, whom he sat next to on a Christmas Eve flight from Fort Myers, Fla., to Detroit, Mich. Hal’s daughter, Pierce, is a flight attendant who was working over the holiday. According to Levy, Hal booked multiple flights on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day to spend time with his daughter.

“What a fantastic father! Wish you both a very Merry Christmas!” Levy wrote.

On Christmas Day, Pierce T. Vaughn shared Levy’s Facebook post, writing “Look ma we made it.”

Pierce thanked “all of the patient, wonderful gate agents” who made Hal’s trip possible and gave a shoutout to Levy “for being a great first class passenger & helping us to understand how cool this actually is!”

What a terrific dad. (For more from the author of “Father Books Six Flights Over Christmas to Spend Time With Daughter, a Flight Attendant” please click HERE)

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Internet Exploded at Trump for Christmas Eve Call to Young Child. But Her Parents Tell a Different Story.

. . .Speaking with Collman Lloyd — a 7-year-old girl from Lexington, South Carolina — on Christmas Eve from the White House, a video, which quickly went viral, showed the president asking Collman if she still believes in Santa Claus — but it was his follow-up statement, which implied Santa is not real, that incited criticism and accusations that Trump had “ruined” Christmas. . .

Instead, Collman’s father — 40-year-old Donald J. Lloyd — told BuzzFeed News that he would use similar language to speak to his daughter about Santa Claus. He also said he believes Trump’s remarks have been “blown out of proportion and unfairly politicized,” according to BuzzFeed.

“I think it’s crazy it became a big deal. It’s Christmastime. I’d love to keep politics out of Christmas,” Donald said. “It didn’t bother me — I like to talk to my kids like adults.” . . .

In the end, both parents appreciated how Trump treated their daughter. At first, they thought she was speaking with a pre-recorded message, then they realized Collman was actually speaking with the president.

“He said, ‘Happy Christmas … It was great speaking to you, Collman … Please tell [your family] I wish them a happy Christmas,'” Erica explained. “It made her Christmas.” (Read more from “Internet Exploded at Trump for Christmas Eve Call to Young Child. But Her Parents Tell a Different Story.” HERE)

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Surprise and Merry Christmas! The 5 Best Videos of Soldiers Coming Home

This Christmas season, the best gifts by far are families reuniting with loved ones who serve in the armed forces. Here are a few of the best videos of soldiers surprising their families for Christmas this year.

1.“Daddy, Daddy!”

Coming home from a six-month deployment in Nepal, Army Captain Eric Morski surprised his 10-year-old daughter at his family’s home in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

2. “The only Christmas gift he asked for.”

This little boy got the one thing he wanted for Christmas: His dad to come home.

3. “Best Christmas, ever!”

Two Minnesota sisters got their Christmas wish when their dad, Capt. Steve Guptill of the Army National Guard, came home from Kuwait.

4. “I don’t think anything will ever top this.”

A local Ohio school teamed up with U.S. Army Private Zackery Douglas on a secret mission to surprise his two favorite cousins.

5. This one will make you cry

A girl in central Indiana was reunited with her soldier mom at a school Christmas concert after a whole year apart. If you’re not crying by now, this one will do it.

(For more from the author of “Surprise and Merry Christmas! The 5 Best Videos of Soldiers Coming Home” please click HERE)

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Trump Answers Christmas Eve Calls From Children Looking for Santa Claus

By AP. Before attending Christmas Eve services at Washington National Cathedral, President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump took calls from children anxious to find out where Santa is on his gift-giving journey.

In one conversation, Trump asked a 7-year-old named Coleman, “Are you still a believer in Santa?” He listened for a moment before adding, “Because at 7, it’s marginal, right?” Trump listened again and chuckled before saying, “Well, you just enjoy yourself.”

Mrs. Trump told a caller that Santa was in the Sahara. Several minutes later, she reported that Santa was far away in Morocco but would be at the caller’s home on Christmas morning.

(Read more from “Trump Answers Christmas Eve Calls From Children Looking for Santa Claus” HERE)

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President Trump to 7-Year-Old: ‘Are You Still a Believer in Santa?’

By NPR. The setting was perfect. The fire was beautifully ablaze, the trees enormously enormous, as the first couple sat beside dainty telephone tables ready to delight young callers in search of Santa.

But what happened next could be considered less than perfect — especially for a young boy named Coleman or his family, who might have had some explaining to do after the brief phone call.

Coleman and the president had been connected through NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which on Christmas Eve is tasked with tracking Santa’s movements as he delivers gifts around the world. (It is still operating despite the partial government shutdown.) . . .

A few seconds into the chat with Coleman, Trump asked: “You doing well in school? … What are you going to do for Christmas? … Are you still a believer in Santa?” . . .

“Because at 7 it’s marginal, right?” Trump asked the child. (Read more from “President Trump to 7-Year-Old: ‘Are You Still a Believer in Santa?'” HERE)

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10 Vintage Christmas Commercials That Will Pull at Your Heartstrings

Sometimes when a commercial is done just right, it becomes as memorable and loved as any other piece of entertainment. When brands find the sweet spot and can incorporate the right amount of humor, sentimentality, and wit into a spot for a product, the public eats it right up. (No pun intended.)

We went through the archives and found several Christmas commercials from the past few decades. Some of these continue to grace our small screens today, as the companies behind them have come to recognize that we associate these particular commercials with the holidays. Others you might not have seen in a while, but are absolute classics in one way or another. Chances are that you have formed memories not just around old Christmas cartoons and shows, but also around the advertisements that made them possible.

(Read more from “10 Vintage Christmas Commercials That Will Pull at Your Heartstrings” HERE)

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This Christmas, Pray for Those Persecuted in the Region of Jesus’ Birth

By Washington Examiner. At Christmastime, writers have in recent years labored to make the nativity into a story about immigrants or refugees. After all, the Holy Family did seek refuge in Egypt.

But there’s little beyond that to justify such a facile comparison. There are Biblical passages about the treatment of strangers and foreigners that fit that topic much better (“for you also were strangers in the land of Egypt”). But the story of Jesus’ birth, if it has any political analog, looks less like a story of migration than a story of political and religious repression by bad governments. It does not resemble America’s civilized politics at all, but sadly it looks a lot like what we see today in the region of the world where Jesus was born.

In the time of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, the various secular powers refused to leave them alone. The Romans first saddled the Holy Family with a census designed to maximize tax revenue from their empire. Added to their bureaucratic indifference was the psychopathic, paranoid behavior of the local ruler, who sought to kill the baby Jesus. . .

In the Middle East specifically, roughly half of Syrian Christians have been forced to flee that country since 2011. An estimated 80 percent of Christians have been forced to flee Iraq since 2003. Smaller communities of Christians in Egypt and Libya have been ground between the same two millstones — the violence of fanatics and the indifference or hostility of secular authorities.

Nor are Christians the only religious group suffering persecution in that region. ISIS has been especially murderous toward their fellow Muslims (either those of the wrong sect or those not sufficiently observant) and toward Yazidis. And closer to the vicinity of Jesus’ birth, the visceral hatred of Jews and the total destruction of Israel have become institutionalized as a form of nationalism, to which even some Americans try to lend legitimacy with boycotts and sanctions. (Read more from “This Christmas, Pray for Those Persecuted in the Region of Jesus’ Birth” HERE)
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This Christmas, Don’t Forget to Pray and Take Action for the Persecuted Christians Around the World

By Fox News. Christmas is a cheerful season in the West. Families and friends gather together, decorate Christmas trees, drink hot chocolate and cherish each other’s company. Most importantly, it is a warm and joyous opportunity to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.

Yet we are lucky in this regard. Tens of millions of Christians around the world are being actively persecuted by authoritarian governments and terrorist groups. This Christmas, we must not forget to pray and take action for the persecuted Church.

Whether it’s the Assyrian community in Iraq or evangelicals in North Korea, many Christians face significant barriers to worshipping Jesus. From China to Iran, believers can be met with death and intense persecution for sharing their faith or celebrating Christmas.

Astonishingly, despite all of these atrocities happening in real time, many in the West remain uninformed about the dangers facing Christian communities worldwide. Many deride articles like this as simplistic paeans to Christian sensibilities. They see Christendom’s dominant status in the West and assume this situation holds worldwide. . .

To this day, Christians remain the most persecuted religious group in the world. Nowhere is this rise in ill-treatment better illustrated than in China. As we have previously highlighted, President Xi perceives Christianity as both a philosophical and political threat to his revisionist agenda. (Read more from “This Christmas, Don’t Forget to Pray and Take Action for the Persecuted Christians Around the World” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Catholic Senior Living Center Bans Residents From Saying ‘Merry Christmas’

A senior living center in Chehalis, Washington has banned its residents from saying “Merry Christmas” or displaying any Christmas cards or decorations with any religious significance in common areas.

The trouble started when the building manager at Providence Place in Chehalis told a Christian resident she could not say “Merry Christmas” or hang Christmas cards with religious symbols on her doorframe because the center receives funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. . .

“Americans don’t lose their constitutionally protected freedom to say ‘Merry Christmas’ or otherwise express their faith just because they live in a facility that accepts government funds,” ADF Senior Counsel Matt Sharp said in a statement. “No HUD rule requires senior living centers that accept federal resources to deny their residents the ability to celebrate Christmas with religious songs and symbols.” . . .

“When decorating the common areas and exterior of your community, think festive not religious,” the letter reads.“Greenery, colored lights, snowmen, and snowflakes all convey the festive atmosphere without alluding to a specific religion.”

In a copy of the letter obtained by The Federalist, Newman specifically claims the ban on religious-themed decor is a directive from HUD’s Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity. In two subsequent letters sent to residents on December 7 and December 12, two of Providence Place’s directors said that while the nonprofit senior living center is Catholic, it cannot allow residents to display anything that is “specifically religious in nature.” (Read more from “Catholic Senior Living Center Bans Residents From Saying ‘Merry Christmas'” HERE)

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