Numerous things have disappeared. Santa is one of them. I hardly see stores decorated much for Christmas at all. I have yet to see a Salvation Army stand set up--whether or not anyone is manning it. Houses in the area are sparsely decorated, if at all--instead of contests to see who can deck out the most, it is who can have the lamest displays. I also barely see any ads for Christmas anything, whether online or instore. Even displays with Christmas supplies seem to be much smaller than just a few years ago.
And when you do see Christmas anything advertised, they always slip in some political correctness. It is as if they are trying to merge the human species into one big blob, the way they did with the greys--and they are doing a good job at it. They are also trying to ruin all the holidays mixing them with each other. Hanukkah and Christmas do not mix--and neither does Kwanzaa (which is actually a corrupted version of Lammas Day, racialized and deliberately moved to conflict with an established holiday). I would rather see Lammas Day moved back to its proper day on the first of August, deracialized so everyone participates, and fixed to its original condition so we all benefit from it. That way, we can have both holidays in their proper places, we don't generate racial conflict or cultural clashes, and everyone wins.
Not to mention, if I hear any more Christmas songs in Spanish (aside Feliz Navidad, which has become a classic despite its being in Spanish), I am ready to find out who is trying to ruin it for English speaking countries and send them a card that says "Triste Weihnachten und pechlich Neue Jahr!" to them. And send Santa a note that trying to push Puerto Rican culture in the North is grounds to receive coal in their stockings. Fine if you live in Puerto Rico or the Southwest--keep that culture there, and keep it pure. But, for those in the North, you are used to dreaming of a white Christmas. And yes, if you live on Christmas Island, you can wait for Santa to sail in with your presents in a canoe instead of a sled--just not in the north of USA, Canada, Europe, or northern Asia where snow is standard.