Gordon Brown and Boris Johnson believe it is our patriotic duty to splurge at the shops to keep the economy afloat, writes Julia Stephenson
The Prime Minister has slashed VAT to keep the tills ringing while London’s Mayor has just written an article berating himself for giving chutney to his nearest and dearest when he should have gone to the shops to boost the economy.
Here is part two. Please see part one for more information and useful links.
Bit by bit, around the world, the tide of peace is rising. It's bubbling up into popular culture everywhere. Here are three links for the holiday season. Enjoy - and Happy Winterval!
1. What is Santa's favourite pizza?
Answer: One that's deep pan, crisp and even.
2. On which side do chickens have the most feathers?
The outside.
3. What kind of paper likes music?
Wrapping paper.
4. What's white and goes up?
A confused snowflake.
5. What do you call a woman who stands between two goal posts?
Annette.
Three cheers for the Archbishop of Canterbury! How refreshing to have a public figure who speaks from the heart and is mercifully unswayed by the need to be popular or win votes, writes Julia Stephenson.
In response to the government's risky plan to borrow hundreds of billions of pounds in order to fund a "fiscal stimulus" package of tax cuts including a reduction in VAT meant to encourage people to spend more, the Archbishop told Radio 4's Today programme he was concerned the right lessons had not been learned from the bursting of Britain's credit bubble.
He said: "I worry about that because it seems a little bit like the addict returning to the drug."
Diane Southam finds Santa in Turkey.
It was the middle of August. Exhausted, we’d been driving for hours in sweltering heat along the Turquoise coast in Turkey, trying to find an inn for the night that hadn’t been requisitioned by package holiday companies.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, wherever we looked, from telegraph poles to billboards, there were posters of a grinning Father Christmas in traditional Santa garb. Seeing Santa in the summer in a Muslim country was confusing to say the least.
As a recovering addict and depressive, I often over-complicate and over-analyse the root cause of my problems. I now believe the root of all my problems is this elusive thing called self-esteem, says Clea Myers
Certainly
I have more now than I ever did, although I question what 'it' is. My
literary agent actually felt my soon-to-be published Memoir, Tweaking the Dream: A Crystal Meth True Story was more about the battle for self-esteem, than a battle to quit drugs.
So for anyone who finds the Christmas holidays difficult and has first-hand experiences of a toxic family environment - presently or echoes from the past - there's always the potential for change and hope, even when you feel alone and isolated.