Should Santa treat all children equally or just those who can afford to pay?
It’s the time of year when shoppers are fighting over car parking spots, parents are fighting over the last singing, light-up Elsa doll in the toy store and online commentators are fighting over whether Santa should be giving all children the same toy at the local shopping centre in the name of fairness.
It began when a mother from the Fraser Coast in QLD fired off an angry letter to her local paper about what she saw as discrimination towards her children by the shopping centre Santa.
It became an intense online battle about whether she is “entitled and greedy” or whether she was right to feel disappointed.
Mother of three boys Kathryn Rodda wrote to her local newspaper, The Fraser Coast Chronicle about how, when Jack, 9, Mason, 8, and Harry, 6, visited Santa last week, they were given a lolly each instead of a gift because she couldn’t afford to pay the $14 for the Santa photograph at the Hervey Bay shopping centre.
“My boys were excited to line up and talk to Santa,” Kathryn said. But after she told Santa they wouldn’t be buying a photo she says her children were “discriminated” against.
She wrote:
“We never buy the photos, because they are really expensive and we can’t afford them.
We waited patiently in line, and the boys saw other kids in front of us get a colouring book or a toy from Santa.
They stopped and talked to Santa for a few minutes and then he dug in his sack and pulled out a lolly.
My boys shook their heads, and I just told them to be grateful for what they were offered, but I asked the girls manning the area why they got a lolly when the kids in front got bigger gifts.
I was then told that we didn’t buy a photo, and only children who get a photo taken get a bigger gift.”
She says her boys were perplexed.
“It was hard because I always teach them to be grateful, but all of the others got a toy,” she told News Limited.
“I tried to get them to understand but they were disappointed – my youngest was particularly upset,” she says.
“They even told their dad when he got home from work that Santa wasn’t fair. We didn’t make a big deal of it but it wasn’t a particularly fair situation.”
In her letter she says she was “disgusted”.
“My children are pretty good natured and easy going, but they are still kids and they saw other kids get bigger things from the same Santa they just saw, they don’t understand that money gets you more.”
“I just could not believe that they would discriminate against people who can’t afford or choose not to get a photo.
“It’s not that I care what little gift is given out, but it should be the same for every single child.”
Kathryn probably thought her complaint would end there, and that the shopping centre might apologise or even send out the desired toy for her kids. Instead, she found herself in the midst of an intense debate about whether Santa should treat all kids equally.
Her letter spurred an angry debate on the pages of the local paper.
“Teach your kids better than this. You are only teaching them to be greedy,” said one commenter.
“You can not be serious? Discrimination?” asked another. “They paid money. They got a product for that money. You didn’t pay money, but you still got to sit on Santa’s lap, which IS what it’s all about. I’m saddened when I see the entitlement generation raising the next generation the same way. Wake up to yourself!”
“This mother set out to get free gifts without putting her own money out, so it’s her actions that are in question here, not the paid guy in the suit who is there to earn an income,”
Another: “If it is such an issue, drive to down to your old ‘big Westfield shopping centre’ and demand your toy… because ..
“Good to see the kids are beginning down the path of enlightenment to what it truly means to be discriminated against and what is important.
Merry Christmas…”
Others sympathised with her…
“I agree with Kathryn, if the shopping centre is going to have a Santa for the kids, it should not be about money making photographers! If he is out in the main area of the shopping centre all the kids should be treated equally.”
Kathryn told News Limited she couldn’t believe the furore.
“I’m being attacked for being greedy but it’s not about that. It’s all about the kid’s point of view – it should be fair for every child. I would be happy for them to get nothing if that was the same as every other child.
“It’s being said that I raise ungrateful kids which is not the case – I’ve always taught them to be grateful.”
What do you think? Should Santa be fair to all children?
Top Comments
Why have a gift or professional photos at all. For my kids, the motivation for talking to Santa was to confide to him what they wanted for Christmas. They expected nothing more. I totally understand this mother's frustration and think the shopping centre's policy of gift giving is all wrong. It's not the kids' fault that the parents can't afford to pay for photos yet they are made to feel that they're worth less than the kids whose parents can afford it. How is that fair. How's this for an idea: If the centre needs to cover costs charge a small fee for everyone for the privilege of sitting on the fat bloke's lap (say, $2-$5) and parents take their own photos. Take the inequity out of it.
How is it fair that people who can afford to pay more receive more? Pretty fair I would say.
On a tangent here but did anyone else totally get the creeps about Santa when they were a kid? Totally creeped me out sitting on this old guy strangers knee when I was a kid. Was never so happy when I found out he wasn't real! Whoops spoiler alert!