I don't get it.
Are the Toronto Police "serving and protecting" by rounding up people who display Christmas lights on their houses or through their windows? Is anyone who buys a tree getting put on a watch-list of suspected Christians? What forms of personal expression are being suppressed here?
As for government recognition of Christmas in particular, if I lived in Toronto (which in my case is more than a theoretical possibility, so I really should say, were I ever actually to move to Toronto permanently), I'd be more concerned about whether the garbage collectors are on strike, about how much TTC fares are, and about whether there are enough social service workers on the government payroll, than whether the government publicly displays a Christmas tree.
My favorite Christmas hymn is Good King Wenceslas. Rather than be concerned with issues that derive strictly from your luxury (for, would your attention be focused on these sorts of issues if you were cold or didn't have enough to eat?), why don't you follow his example of legend, and instead simply, oh, help the less fortunate, by donating money or more importantly time and energy to charity? As I can personally attest to, Canadian winters can be rather hard, even as far south as Toronto. Or is directing one's energies to help those in need not what the lesson of Christmas really is?
I'd say, in all practical certainty, that my answer to the question in the thread title is "No".