According to an Ottawa Citizen story today:
In 2002, the Christmas stamps showed aboriginal scenes of Jesus and Mary; in 2003, it was Christmas presents. Last year, the theme was Santa Claus parades.
This year they offer these:
According to the last official tally—offered up by the last Canada Census that was done in 2001—nearly 70 percent of Canadians chose to describe themselves as some form of “Christian”. Not “atheist”, or “agnostic”, or “liberal” or “environmentalist”, anything else, which they had every right to do.
Therefore, naturally, Canada Post is going to release three secular (non-religious) stamps for Christmas next year, and one Christian-related stamp. That’s math, liberal style. 75% secular, 25% Christian.
And that’s how state-run “businesses” run—particularly when they’re being run by liberals and those they appoint.
Christ gets Canada Post’s stamp of approval
Religious imagery is making a comeback this Christmas season, writes Jenny Jackson.
For the first time, Canada Post is selling religious and secular Christmas stamps, hoping to appease “both camps” in the treacherous crossfire over holiday terminology.
Next year, it will offer three secular stamps and one religious one. […]
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