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Christmas Cheer United States

US Postal Service Announces a Nationwide Digital 'Operation Santa' (cnn.com) 25

For 108 years Americans have helped their postal service perform "Operation Santa." But this year's program will be fully digital and nationwide, reports CNN: The program allows children and families to write letters to Santa, which will then be processed and shared online beginning on December 4 at USPSOperationSanta.com. Once the letters are live, anyone in the U.S. can go online and adopt a letter, and help make a child or family's holiday wishes come true. Companies also can help adopt letters as teams.

While anyone and everyone can write a letter, the program was started to help families and kids in need, said Kim Frum, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Postal Service (USPS). "The program has always been about providing holiday gifts for families who may not have the means to provide for anything more than basic everyday needs," Frum told CNN in email. Over the last 108 years, the USPS has received hundreds of thousands of letters as part of the "Operation Santa" program, Frum said. Last year alone, more than 11,000 packages were sent to people who wrote to Santa and had their letters adopted. USPS first launched an online pilot of USPS Operation Santa in 2017 in New York City, Frum said. It expanded to seven cities online in 2018, and 17 cities in 2019. The success of the digitization of the program helped pave the way for this year's expansion.

The decision to go fully digital comes as coronavirus cases continue to surge nationwide, leaving the nation to grapple with the consequences, including the economic impact.

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US Postal Service Announces a Nationwide Digital 'Operation Santa'

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    It's a matter of priorities obviously.
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      It's brilliant. Sure you want to take America back to when it was great but how far back is that exactly? When was the last time America seemed just perfect?

      The answer everyone can agree on is back when I still believed in Santa Claus.

      • Perfection? Try 1999/2000. Windows 2000 was thought to be all the OS we'd ever need. The AP Wire and most magazines were freely readable on the WWW.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          When I went to college in the 1970s, birth control pills had become widely available and there were no common STDs that couldn't be cleared up by a few weeks of penicillin.

    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Sunday November 22, 2020 @04:35PM (#60754694)

      The postal office did great, despite the administration's attempt to kneecap it.

      • Yes, and in no state did the accusations of mistakes equal that state's margin-of-victory. Trump, why haven't you conceded yet?

      • In this case though I think they're opening a scary can of worms:

        Once the letters are live, anyone in the U.S. can go online and adopt a letter, and help make a child or family's holiday wishes come true.

        Anyone can dive in and help themselves. Anyone. "Hello, little girl. How old are you? Are your parents around? What are you wearing?".

        I really hope they've got decent vetting in place...

      • Exactly! I was just thinking the same but anyway its a great initiative. Viva tv apk [vivatvapk.co]
  • "The program has always been about providing holiday gifts for families who may not have the means to provide for anything more than basic everyday needs,"

    How about congress raise the goddamn minimum wage to something reasonable?!

  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Sunday November 22, 2020 @03:29PM (#60754492)
    but, what is this need for humans to impose non-existent mythical characters on their off-spring? It's like when your parents forced you to attend Sunday School only to realize later on when you get older that everyone around you must be bat-$hit crazy. Magical creatures creating and delivering presents to kids? A magical character deciding if I burn or live lavishly for eternity? Perhaps if we are truthful with our children they will be less prone later in life to falling for cults, fake news, misinformation, conspiracy theories, etc..
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Terry Pratchett wrote (through the words of Death) that belief in little lies like The Hogfather (Santa) is practice to believe in big lies like justice and mercy.

      He did not mention that it's practice for believing in other big lies like fatherland and race.

    • Your mistake is in thinking that Santa is an imposition. Perhaps some parents use him that way, with threats of coal (This is a poor threat nowadays, even when I was little I would have welcomed a lump of coal. I'd never seen one, and was very curious.), but thinking about fantastical things is... fun? Expansive? I'm having difficulty finding words for it. It's a positive experience for many people.

      God is not unlike Santa, though more extreme. A lot of people really like the notion that God is real, and
    • Parents were hoping they could get their kids to behave for an entire year, in exchange for being rewarded at the end of the year.
    • Myths are an important part of life. Even if they didn't happen, they provide an important way to transmit our culture and remember why we exist. Your way, called materialism, was tried at the highest levels and with ruthless enthusiasm in the 20th century. It not only failed but produced unprecedented human suffering. How is it you don't know this? It's widely known, especially by its victims.
    • Well, in the first place, there really was a Saint Nicholas who started all of this... So, rather than a myth, it's more like a true story that morphed into a children's story.

      But it exposes children to some interesting facets of human nature:

      1. Your happiness is tied to your behavior
      2. People will believe just about anything if they think there's some benefit for them.
      3. People will embellish and exaggerate stories if it suits their agenda.

      Stories of Santa, while enjoyed in childhood, prepare people to

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Santa's old, so he can't leave the house just like Grandma and Grandpa.
  • Sorry kids, the Internet link to the North Pole seems a little saturated right now...

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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