Ordered
to Remove that Satanic Symbol the Peace Sign
Tuesday,
November 28, 2006
By Lisa Pampuch
A
recent news story illustrates the dangers that ignorance and intolerance pose
to our free speech and private property rights. It also illustrates why I don't
live in a neighborhood with a homeowners association.
The
Associated Press reports that the Loma Linda Homeowners Association, which imposes
its will on and collects association fees from property owners in a 270-home subdivision
in Pagosa Springs, Colo., ordered Lisa Jensen to remove her Christmas wreath.
It
threatened to fine Jensen $25 for every day that the wreath remains on the side
of her home.
No,
it didn't order the wreath's removal because it's a holiday decoration that might
offend non-Christian residents.
No,
it didn't order the wreath's removal because the association bans Christmas greenery
adorning Loma Linda subdivision homes.
Calm
any "war on Christmas" fears. In fact, it ordered the wreath's removal
because of complaints from three or four subdivision residents about the wreath's
peace sign shape.
Some
residents interpret the wreath as a statement against the Iraq war. Other residents,
according to Bob Kearns, president of the HOA, believe the peace symbol is a Satanic
sign.
Jensen
says the wreath is an expression of the spirit of Christmas and that she won't
be bullied into removing it.
"Peace
is way bigger than not being at war. This is a spiritual thing," she told
the AP.
The
HOA's letter ordering the wreath's removal said that it "will not allow signs,
flags etc. that can be considered divisive."
Peace
is a divisive concept? Bah humbug.
If
you want divisive, look at the election results of Proposition 90, which failed
with 52 percent of Californians voting no on the eminent domain reform measure,
48 percent voting yes. That's a divisive issue.
The
2000 Census determined that the average Colorado household has 2.53 people, meaning
that 683.1 people live in the Loma Linda subdivision. Of those, three or four
complained about the peace symbol wreath. Somewhere between .43 and .58 percent
of residents complained about Lisa Jensen's wreath. The other 99.57 to 99.42 didn't
mind it.
That's
hardly divisive.
I
grew up in a conservative branch of Protestantism that has a strong fear of the
occult, but was never told that the peace symbol is Satanic. I heard about Santa
being an anagram for Satan, I was warned about the dangers of Halloween, and I
was taught to fear 666, but the peace symbol as a Satanic sign escaped the notice
of my pastors and teachers.
So
I did a little research. According to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament web
site, the peace symbol debuted in 1958 during one of its antinuclear marches in
London. Created by Gerald Holtom, artist and World War II conscientious objector,
Holtom says the symbol incorporates the semaphore symbols for the letters N (for
nuclear) and D (for disarmament).
It
also represents a person in despair, with arms outstretched downward, "in
the manner of Goya's peasant before the firing squad. I formalized the drawing
into a line and put a circle round it."
The
Satanic attribution of the peace symbol reminds me of the claim that "Xmas"
is demeaning to Christmas - they're both caused by historical ignorance. The Greek
letter chi, which looks like an "X," is the first letter of Christ and
was used by early Christians as a symbol for Christ. "Xmas" is not an
attempt to remove Christ from Christmas.
Jensen's
neighbors who see Satan in the peace symbol should cool their fevered imaginations,
as should folks who continue to believe in the fictional war on Christmas.
But
those of us who see encroachment of governmental and quasi-governmental agencies
upon our free speech and private property rights, on the other hand, we've got
real worries and lots of work to do.
Prop.
90 narrowly failed in the November election. If civil liberties are important
to you, write your state legislators to urge them to support a ban on eminent
domain on behalf of private developers as soon as they convene next week.
On
a federal level, we must hold the Democratic majority in Congress responsible
for removing threats to our civil liberties passed by the rubber-stamp Republican
majority.
And
this holiday season, don't be fooled by authors, pundits and fundraisers who claim
that that there's a war on Christmas. A war on free speech and private property
rights, absolutely. A war on critical thinking and tolerance, you bet.
Let's
put our energy into protecting those endangered concepts. Christmas is doing just
fine.