By Rich Kozlovich
What's the real story of Thanksgiving? The Civil War was the impetus for Thanksgiving to first become an official American holiday. In 1863 Abraham Lincoln believed a unifying national holiday was needed to start healing the wounds of the nation. A day of thanks by a nation of believers to the Almighty, saying to America:
"with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience .. fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty hand to heal the wounds of the nation..."
However, there's far more to the story behind America's Thanksgiving. And that story is foundational.
Back in 2016 I posted a link to this article by John Stossel, Thanksgiving Tragedy, saying:
I
know that seems weird, but before that first Thanksgiving, the Pilgrims
nearly starved to death because they didn't respect private property.
When they first arrived in Massachusetts, they acted like Bernie Sanders
wants us to act. They farmed "collectively." Pilgrims said, "We'll grow
food together and divide the harvest equally." Bad idea. Economists
call this the "tragedy of the commons." When everyone works "together,"
some people don't work very hard. Likewise, when the crops were ready
to eat, some grabbed extra food -- sometimes picking corn at night,
before it was fully ready. Teenagers were especially lazy and likely to
steal the commune's crops.
Pilgrims almost starved. Governor Bradford wrote in his diary, "So they
began to think how they might raise as much corn as they could ... that
they might not still thus languish in misery."
His answer: He divided the commune into parcels and assigned each
Pilgrim his own property, or as Bradford put it, "set corn every man for
his own particular. ... Assigned every family a parcel of land." That
simple change brought the Pilgrims so much plenty that they could share
food with Indians. Bradford wrote that it "made all hands very
industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have
been."
The Puritans landed in 1620 with 132 people. By fall of 1621 only 53 were left alive. But, they had a harvest, but didn't thrive until they accepted the foundation of capitalism - personal ownership of land, personal responsibility and personal profit! Personal profit isn't a dirty word it's the foundation for across the board wealth accumulation for society as a whole.
By 1640 there were 11,000 people living in what's now the New England region.
As would be expected with that sort of wealth creation and success, New
England flourished, and was a key component of the 13 colonies. It
was a society of based on individual farmers and families working
their own land.
The Jamestown colony formed in 1607, and according to Richard Maybury:
Within 12 months over half would be dead. As a result of their
socialist concepts, most of the work was being
done by only one-fifth of the men,
the other four-fifths choosing to be
parasites. In the winter
of 1609/1610, called "The Starving
Time" the population fell from 500 to
60. The Virginia colony had 8000 people land there between 1607 and 1625 with a 15% survival rate.
So, with such a failure rate what drove people to keep coming?
Religious conflict and
instability in England as well as the rest of Europe. Also, Spain's
exploitation of the New World gave them unprecedented economic power in
Europe and it was realized the vast majority of the New World was
untouched - the potential for riches was obvious in "fisheries, timber,
furs and expanses of fertile soil." Not the easy wealth of mineral
resources, but wealth that could only be developed by real colonization
and hard work. Long term wealth and power.
But once they all abandoned the insanity of socialism and adopted
capitalism they thrived beyond their wildest dreams.
"In 1614, [Virginia] Colony Secretary Ralph Hamor wrote that after the switch, there was "plenty of food, which every man by his own industry may easily and doth procure." He said that when the socialist system had prevailed, "we reaped not so much corn from the labors of 30 men as three men have done for themselves now."
So the most important meal officially celebrated in America is a toast to capitalism, individual ownership of land, and personal industriousness, and an absolute repudiation of leftism in all it's manifestations, including, and especially, the atheism they've promoted that's destroying western civilization.
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