Commentary
My new heroes are the subway workers of the London Underground who balked at being told they had to work today, the day after Christmas. In a pig's eye, they said.
The day after Christmas, known colloquially as "Boxing Day," is a public holiday in Britain, Australia, Canada and many other countries, including Ireland, where it is called St. Stephen's Day, and where traditional mummers or "Wren Boys" march around small villages, playing music and demanding treats.
Ordered to work under normal rules and for regular pay, the union representing British train drivers demanded a threefold pay increase for the holiday and a compensating day off.
When the transit authority wouldn't agree, the drivers called a 24-hour strike. Boxing Day, by hook or by crook, will remain a holiday for them.
That's all right with me. We need a break, and it's about time somebody had the backbone to say so. Boxing Day -- some think the name harks back to the days when boxes were put out to collect alms for the poor -- is just in the nick of time.
You would need a cattle prod to get me to go near a shopping mall, an office or a factory today.
With Christmas on Saturday, today seems an even more important day of rest, a day not only to set aside our labors but also to lay down our burdens -- the commercialism of a month of shopping, the contentions of our fretful political battles and the anxieties of an uneasy world.