Wokeness embraces placing a higher priority on diversity, equity, and inclusion than on conventional Christian principles.
Officials from Emory Healthcare in Georgia are changing things significantly. With effect from 2024, Juneteenth will take the place of Christmas Eve as a paid holiday. The Washington Free Beacon reported on this judgment.
On August 31, CEO of Emory Healthcare Joon Sup Lee wrote an email to staff members of the hospital system expressing optimism and confidence. He underlined the benefits of a recent choice, saying that it will open up additional opportunities for celebration, introspection, and learning.
Lee, as expected, also paid his respects at the DEI altar.
He wrote that “diversity, equity, and inclusion at Emory Healthcare (EHC) is about creating an environment of true belonging for our patients and team members, while ensuring equitable outcomes for all.”
Administrators are now using wokeness as a quick fix rather than exercising critical thinking due to its ubiquity in significant U.S. firms. Lee’s email is depressing since it uses a standard business template.
The biggest healthcare institution in Georgia had a tsunami of unfavorable employee feedback, many of which were anonymous. Few were prepared to discuss it in public, demonstrating the depth of their disappointment. Atlanta’s WANF-TV has been interested in this worrying issue.
“You can’t replace one for the other. It’s completely inappropriate,” one health care provider said, according to the outlet. “It’s essentially pitting a Christian holiday against something that’s to be celebratory for everyone – but specifically for our Black colleagues.”
Another worker called attention to the irony of the shift.
REVEALED: The 3 reasons you should NEVER use Vegetable Oils…
“Something that should be an extremely joyful and collective celebration has become another reminder of how our Black colleagues can’t have anything without sacrifice,” the person said. “This is not what we have been pushing for. We thought Juneteenth was being added to the holiday calendar.”
Edwina Clanton, the president of the NAACP in DeKalb County, expressed her regret about the shift.
“I don’t understand, why they can’t do both,” Clanton reportedly stated, via WANF.
“I’m sure it will put anger in some hearts,” she said. “Why do we have to do this? Why can’t we have our old holidays off? Some more consideration, even asking the employees which days you want to give up, that may have worked better.”
To minimize any hardship to patients, Emory authorities decided to change out the holiday rather than institute a new one.
“For each observed holiday, our clinics and business offices close, which means our patients are unable to make clinic appointments for those days,” Lee told employees.
All staff members will have to take advantage of their paid time off for Christmas Eve beginning in the next year.
Clanton and the staff have seen that choosing Juneteenth over Christmas Eve may lead to conflict among Christians.
While it may seem minor to tolerate some negative emotions in exchange for a favorable transformation, that is regrettably not the case here. It would be difficult for anyone to argue that Juneteenth is more important to all Americans than Christmas Eve.
Imagine being informed on Christmas Eve 2019 that Juneteenth will replace Christmas in the state with the most populous health care system in the South in only four years. Are you serious?
You were not alone if you were unaware of Juneteenth before December 2019.
A federal holiday honoring the abolition of slavery, Juneteenth was formally declared by Congress in June 2021. On June 19, 1865, Union troops made their way to Galveston Bay, Texas, bearing news of President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, which had been issued two and a half years earlier. This date commemorates that arrival.
Everybody need to accept a holiday honoring emancipation. However, Juneteenth doesn’t succeed in achieving that goal.
It is clear that lawmakers adopted the holiday in a hurried manner. Major occurrences in 2020 included the George Floyd incident and the Black Lives Matter movement. Politicians who love to display their goodness felt compelled to act in response. And what better way to demonstrate their morality than to give government workers one extra day off?
A truly unusual and unanticipated holiday is Juneteenth. On second thought, there are a number of alternative possibilities that would be more appropriate.
The emancipation proclamation was issued by President Lincoln on September 22, 1862, and it was a historic act.
On January 31, 1865, the 13th Amendment was ratified by Congress, marking a significant turning point in history.
A notable accomplishment was made on December 6, 1865, when the 13th Amendment was formally ratified.
These dates represent the end of slavery in a more precise manner than Juneteenth.
Consider these two additional suggestions for a genuinely novel method of honoring deserving people: February 28 or 29, and March 1.
The fact that neither date has an associated year adds to the occasion’s solemnity by serving as a stark reminder of slavery’s horrible past to modern Americans.
The legendary abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass was born in either February 1817 or 1818, while the exact date is unknown.
The birth year of escaped slave and abolitionist Harriet Tubman is unknown. She may have been born between 1815 and 1825, according to several reports. Recent biographies, however, contend that, in light of the information at hand, she was most likely born in March 1822.
Imagine a government holiday that honors two outstanding people while also bringing attention to the countless others who toiled in silence. We would remember them every year on either February 28 or March 1. This concept serves as a potent reminder of the numerous unsung heroes in our past while also honoring their legacies.
We could have arrived at our conclusion after considerable consideration. If, however, it had taken us to Juneteenth, I would not have objected, with the exception of the fact that it is not remembered historically.
introducing a modern holiday with roots in societal awareness and ethical conscience from the post-2020 era.
Prepare yourself for more annoyance when woke moralizers replace Christmas Eve with their brand-new deity.




