…and both will kill you with mold and/or allergens. It says so in the article! Happy Holidays!
Did you know…?
Michigan ranks third in the nation in the number of Christmas trees harvested, and supplies approximately 2 million Christmas trees each year to retailers across the U.S., according to the Michigan Ag Council. Roughly 37,000 acres of land in the Great Lakes State is devoted to growing Christmas trees.
Every Christmas my daddy would drag a Christmas tree inside and say, “Decorate the tree, kids.”
We’d start decorating it and my mother would come running into the room screaming, "THIS TREE IS A SYMBOL OF NIMROD[…]NIMROD MARRIED HIS MOTHER TO KEEP THE BABYLONIAN BLOODLINE PURE, AND THE CHRISTMAS TREE IS THE EVERYTHING TREE![…]IT’S PAGAN! IT’S AN ABOMINATION!
And we’d scream and she’d drag it out and my daddy would drag it back in and say, “DECORATE THE TREE!”
And we’d say, “Please, we don’t wanna decorate the Babylonian symbol of evil.”
It was horrible. So I left home, because I couldn’t stand it anymore.
—Jayne County, from Please Kill Me
Alternate links:
An artificial tree offers superior value, particularly from an economic perspective. Consider my experience: I’ve been using the same tree for about eight years, which I purchased at about $100 during an after-Christmas sale. In contrast, a real tree might cost around $30 to $40 and is only usable for a single season before disposal.
The pressure to choose a real tree seems to advocate for a less capitalistic approach, effectively encouraging higher expenditure for a product with significantly less utility. Another guilt trip asking for me to change my “evil” ways, rather than for the system to change. Instead, we should be promoting incentives for utilizing efficient manufacturing processes, such as those found in Chinese production, which align with both economic sensibility and sustainable usage.