Last week on Twitter, he posted this:

x This is a Christmas Tree that is used by people celebrating Christmas Ã°ÂÂÂ



This is not a holiday tree. pic.twitter.com/KcF2ZJxtTJ Ã¢ÂÂ Scott Walker (@ScottWalker) November 8, 2019

Of course, that was not enough.

x Type this word on your iPhone and look what emoji comes up:



Christmas Ã°ÂÂÂ Ã¢ÂÂ Scott Walker (@ScottWalker) November 8, 2019

And then there was this.

x This morning I got an email from @Twitter saying they received complaints from this tweet.



Merry Christmas Ã°ÂÂÂ https://t.co/N2ptWDY6dA Ã¢ÂÂ Scott Walker (@ScottWalker) November 9, 2019

And this.

x Tune into @foxandfriends this morning. IÃ¢ÂÂll be talking about @EricHolderÃ¢ÂÂs role in VA election Ã°ÂÂÂ³ (hint: gerrymandering) & why itÃ¢ÂÂs a #Christmas tree Ã°ÂÂÂ² Ã¢ÂÂ Scott Walker (@ScottWalker) November 12, 2019

And yet again.

The War on Christmas© is just like everything else the American right throws out there. They know they can offer the American people nothing tangible, nothing that will improve their everyday lives. So they give us the culture wars, garbage that makes no difference to anyone. But it drums up the fervent, fanatical support of small vocal groups, amplified by the likes of Fox News, InfoWars, Breitbart, and other right-wing “news” outlets. As these culture wars are amplified through the right wing-media machine, the traditional media picks up the stories, making issues that matter to what amounts to a handful of people into a much larger thing that they really are.

Of course, Republicans in the Wisconsin Legislature, taking Walker’s lead, have now wasted time and taxpayer money on a ridiculous argument over what to call the dead pine tree in the state Capitol rotunda. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported:

Sixty Republicans and five Democrats voted to officially recognize the Capitol's holiday centerpiece as a Christmas tree, with GOP lawmakers who brought the resolution arguing it simply honors tradition and includes the Christian faith in the rotunda during the holidays where a Menorah also is kept.

...

"It is a Christmas tree. Everyone knows it's a Christmas tree. Changing the name of the Christmas tree to anything else would be a political game," Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, said. "And that's what the governor did when he renamed it."

Note to Majority Leader Steineke: It was called a holiday tree for 25 years, and it did not bother anyone. The person who made it a political game was Scott Walker. Taking a pointless vote, on the taxpayer dime, over what to call a dead tree is making it a political game.

The reality is that the face of America is changing. One of the founding ideas of our nation was that there would be no state religion. As the United States has grown and changed, the composition of the nation has changed. We are a multicultural nation with people of many faiths and no faiths living and working side by side. Instead of doing and saying things that further divide us, we should be focusing on becoming a more inclusive society. A good step in that direction would be for the American right to stop fighting the fictional War on Christmas©. In case they have not noticed, Christmas won—it is not even Thanksgiving yet, and my TV is wall-to-wall Christmas ads. Walk into any Home Depot, and it looks like Christmas threw up in there.