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#GivingTuesday. Be There.

Today officially begins the holiday season of giving

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Philanthropy is entering the 21st Century.

Just as Black Friday kicks off the holiday shopping season for brick-and-mortar retailers and Cyber Monday launches the online shopping season, we now have #GivingTuesday (the day after Cyber Monday — today) as a starting point for charitable acts by individuals, groups and companies.

I know: Americans are the most generous people in the world. (Although, some are more obsessed with sharing ILLUMINATION than life’s other necessities, as in the festive cries of “Nuke ‘em ‘til they glow!”)

But the needs are many, and it doesn’t hurt to use social media such as Twitter and Facebook to emphasize the idea of giving without expecting anything in return.

Most of us start out with good intentions; but many of our tentative good deeds stay on the back burner because of the crush of obligatory Christmas cards, holiday menu planning, shopping for the hard-to-please and the like. A new tradition of designating one specific day as a focal point for the initiation of a season of good deeds could be empowering.

Nudges are sometimes necessary. Americans give 10 percent of their total annual charitable donations on just two days — the LAST two days of the (tax) year. (As Tiny Tim would say, “God bless our deductions — every one.”) #GivingTuesday would provide an incentive for digging deeply a little earlier.

According to the Desert News (in Salt Lake City, Utah), a recent Red Cross study found that four out of five Americans say that giving is an important part of their holiday tradition. You know what that means. The other one-fifth (nearly 63 million people) will doubtless find themselves the subject of a Hallmark Channel yuletide movie within the next 30 days. (“Sorry, Mr. Bradford, but we need to kill off your wife. This part calls for a sullen WIDOWER who meets a ball-of-optimism little girl.”)

I know there are some Scrooges out there who oppose the establishment of a formal day of national generosity. I think they fear a sort of “bracket creep” with holidays. They worry that, before long, Cyber Monday and #GivingTuesday will be followed by Wascally Wednesday, on which Americans band together to shred recipes for wabbit stew.

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