There’s a war in this country between people in love with consumerism and those who seem dead set on stopping it. I’m a conscientious objector in that war, because I’m not on either side. I defend the right of people to be as shallow and materialistic as they want to be, but it doesn’t mean I like it.
Few things symbolize our consumer culture the way the Christmas buying season does, and the focal point of that season seems to be the traditional opening — the day after Thanksgiving that we’ve come to call Black Friday.
Three days ago, I wrote about the efforts of anti-consumer activists — who I’d say are downright socialist in their orientation — to stop people from buying from major companies on Black Friday this year. The people waiting in line for a Black Friday sale here Thursday night certainly didn’t believe that big companies were dictating anything to them. It’s when I look at these two groups — the materialist-oriented throngs of shoppers on one side and the anti-consumerist socialist activists on the other — that I realize just how ambivalent I really am about this. I don’t like or agree with either side.

Arrogance and stupidity go hand in hand for the coercive state
Certainty leaves us unwilling to change beliefs when we’re wrong
We can’t control timing of death, just what we do as we’re waiting
Turkey pardon? How about pardons for jailed innocent people instead?
Donald Trump’s jingoistic tribalism marks him as a dangerous buffoon
Rational rules don’t apply when the state gives itself a monopoly
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
Autumn scents send subtle signals every year that it’s time for change
There’s hatred, evil and injustice, but this is the ‘real’ America, too