I guess that yeah, it does matter. Because before I had kids, I wasn't going to feed into the holidays powered by companies looking to make millions because it was just pure crap. Then I had my son and my hard line kinda shriveled up and went away

Its not that I don't understand what you are saying, I completely do. I know that my son was happy believing in all those dumb stories we tell our kids and when he discovered on his own that
everyone has the capabilty to be Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny or the Tooth Fairy (personally, I still want to be a Fairy when I grow up

) it was a big deal for him. Not in the "my parents are assholes, they lied to me this whole time, how can I ever trust them again" kind of way, but in a "how can I be involved and help" kind of way.
I'm sure most of it is the way we approached things. Whenever he asked if those made up people/things were real, we told him they could be. I guess its just that I want my kids to ask questions and search for the answers on their own, in their own way, so we deliberately gave them open ended answers, so they would continue to ask questions. Obviously, no one way of raising kids is right, its all a matter of opinion.
All I know, is that when my daughter does that crazy belly-laugh of hers when she's running around the yard looking for eggs the Easter Bunny hid, the world kinda seems not so crappy.