**If you want to troll religion, go to the threadjacked Defeating Homosexuality thread. It doesn't apply here because, even if religion is all hooey, adults who teach it to their kids typically believe it themselves, whereas I know of no adults who believe in Santa religiously. If there are such people, I'm not interested in discussing them here. This is purely a thread to discuss traditions of deliberate lies to children. Thank you for not being a douche.**
Also the Tooth Fairy, Easter Bunny, etc. Is it all a sick game to teach our kids cynicism, or does it just amuse us to fill their heads with lies and exploit their gullibility? It's not like any of these teach kids life lessons or anything. They're just random nonsensical traditions propagated for tradition's sake. Nor do they add any special sense of wonder; I, at least, regarded Christmas with the same sense of mercenary calculation both before and after I learned Santa was a fraud. I can't recall if I ever really believed in the Tooth Fairy, but my general attitude as far back as I can remember was, "Huh. Lost a tooth. Cool, another quarter tomorrow morning!" In every case, the magical trappings were just some boring logistics involved in getting me my loot. Were the rest of you any different?
Do they have this stuff in other cultures too? Like, do Chinese kids believe in the Summer Dragon King who hides candy around the house on Mao's birthday (I don't know what holidays they celebrate over there)?
Also the Tooth Fairy, Easter Bunny, etc. Is it all a sick game to teach our kids cynicism, or does it just amuse us to fill their heads with lies and exploit their gullibility? It's not like any of these teach kids life lessons or anything. They're just random nonsensical traditions propagated for tradition's sake. Nor do they add any special sense of wonder; I, at least, regarded Christmas with the same sense of mercenary calculation both before and after I learned Santa was a fraud. I can't recall if I ever really believed in the Tooth Fairy, but my general attitude as far back as I can remember was, "Huh. Lost a tooth. Cool, another quarter tomorrow morning!" In every case, the magical trappings were just some boring logistics involved in getting me my loot. Were the rest of you any different?
Do they have this stuff in other cultures too? Like, do Chinese kids believe in the Summer Dragon King who hides candy around the house on Mao's birthday (I don't know what holidays they celebrate over there)?
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