Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

“Merry Christmas” is an expression of goodwill, not an attack on inclusivity

|
|

Wishing others a “Merry Christmas” – or any other holiday-specific greeting, for that matter – should not be a matter of controversy or cultural upset. 

While “Merry Christmas” used to be a fairly casual December greeting, recent years have seen a significant public shift to the secular “Happy Holidays.” This is done in the name of inclusivity: since you can’t know for sure which holiday a stranger celebrates, neutral terminology is often thought to be preferable. 

The goal of inclusivity is a noble one, and it comes from a good place. Yet, it misses a key component of the concept of a holiday greeting: the idea of spreading genuine, personal goodwill. 

I would speculate that the vast majority of people who wish others a Merry Christmas aren’t doing so to cause harm or make others feel excluded. They’re probably just spreading holiday cheer in a way that makes sense to them, and in a way that aligns with how they celebrate the holiday season. 

In a world increasingly focused on celebrating diversity, it’s counterintuitive to shut down certain holiday greetings and replace them with a neutral baseline for everyone. Holiday greetings should come from the heart, and that means the freedom to express whatever greeting makes the most sense to you. 

Despite some claims to the contrary, wishing someone a Merry Christmas is not an invasive attempt to push one’s religion onto others. In fact, many people who celebrate Christmas don’t identify as Christians. A 2013 study found that 81 per cent of non-Christians in the U.S. celebrate Christmas, meaning not every person wishing you a Merry Christmas necessarily follows Christianity. 

Anyone can celebrate Christmas, just like anyone can wish you a Merry Christmas. If someone wishes you a Merry Christmas but they’re not a believer in Christianity, it makes no sense to assert that they are trying to push the Christian religion on anyone. 

It’s worth noting that this mindset should apply equally to each religious holiday. If someone wishes you a “Happy Hanukkah,” “Joyous Kwanzaa” or any other holiday-specific greeting, that should be taken as a pure gesture of goodwill and holiday spirit. It should be accepted and appreciated as such, even if the recipient doesn’t celebrate that particular holiday. As long as it’s clear that there’s no malicious intent, it should be received as a gesture of goodwill and nothing more. 

Despite the holidays being meant to be a time for joy and togetherness, this is not the case for many people. The holidays can be one of the most stressful times of the year for many, a concern that’s entirely valid for a multitude of reasons. 

In a time that can already bring so many stressors, there’s no need to arbitrarily manufacture another one. Being a killjoy when someone wishes you a holiday-specific greeting just adds to the already vast number of holiday stressors. It makes people feel the need to celebrate their personal holiday in private, rather than openly sharing what makes the holidays special to them. 

The intent to normalise “Happy Holidays” as the default seasonal greeting comes from the right place. Despite this, discouraging others from using their personal holiday greeting is an unnecessary stressor that contradicts the free and joyous spirit that the holiday season aims to create. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Social media has an alt-right pipeline problem, and women are its newest target 

Trends that urge women to step into their “divine feminine energy,” consume their way into a “clean girl aesthetic” and blame small mistakes on the fact they are “just a girl” are not products of neutral shifts in our algorithms. The differing frames women have been forced into online indicate subtle dog whistles to alt-right ideologies, ultimately functioning to naturalize conservatism, traditional gender roles and regressive choice feminism. 

The loneliness epidemic: a Gen-Z moral crisis, or a product of intimacy without dependency? 

If you’ve ever scrolled through social media, sat through a family dinner or had to endure a ‘situationship,’ surely you have been exposed to the common diagnosis of modern dating as a moral failure. It’s always the same arguments: the newer generation is impatient, nobody wants to put in the work, everyone is incapable of commitment and they’re all addicted to novelty. 

The presentation of technology and its inevitability  

For the first two decades of the 21st century, technology advanced at breakneck speed. Its rapid development often left sacrificed accountability, with tech being allowed to interfere with institutions like democracy, personal rights, privacy and ownership. 

The NHL is homophobic and the use of “Heated Rivalry” in their promotion doesn’t change that 

Piggybacking off the popularity of Crave’s new hit hockey show, Heated Rivalry, doesn’t make the NHL any less homophobic

Brock University’s Concurrent Education program is exhausting its students before they get the chance to become educators 

The Concurrent Education program at Brock University is unnecessarily difficult and ridiculously expensive, causing future educators to experience complete burnout before they even have a chance to reach the classroom. 

Should you do a moot court on a whim? 

On Jan. 24, on a frigid morning during a cold snap and with just four hours of sleep, I embarked at 7:40 a.m. to meet my partner in crime, Wenyang Ming, for my first mock moot court trial.  

A good rom-com shouldn’t be the exception, but the rule 

The rom-coms of today don’t just disappoint — they feel out of touch.

Editorial: Feelings over Trump’s military intervention in Venezuela are contrasting but not contradictory 

The response to the United States’ capture of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro displays an unusual juxtaposition: many Americans are upset at U.S. President Donald Trump for his unannounced military intervention while, on the contrary, many Venezuelans — namely those living within the U.S. — have met the news with widespread celebration.