I love Thanksgiving. It is a holiday, with little or no religious
significance for most of us, spent, ideally, with family or friends.
Only the Fourth of July is better, in my opinion.
It celebrates
our thanks for so many things, even when our lives seem particularly
precious. But it is a day also to think of those less fortunate, no
matter how dire we think our situation is. Murrow's Harvest of Shame
was first telecast just before Thanksgiving and this year we have the
horrors in Mumbai (I keep wanting to say "Bombay") and the possibility
that we were its target, to remind us to maintain some perspective and
humanity, despite our own troubles.
Most of what I have to be
grateful for is none of your business, and I suspect that you are not
that interested anyway. I will note that my parents are still quite
healthy and active and in their early 80s, and for that I do give
thanks, but that's enough of that.
I give thanks almost every
day for the fact that they were born in this country, and that I was as
well. The courage of those who brought their parents to these shores,
and, actually, to Boston, will fill me with gratitude for people of
whom I know next to nothing, for as long as I live.
The Boston
part is important, too. There is something about New England, I think,
that can enhance an appreciation of what this country represents.
Whether it does or not, I am quite thankful that as close as we came in
recent years---as we have in the past---to throwing it all away, our
nation came to its senses at almost the last possible moment and hope
abounds that the gift of our English founders, transmuted by experience
on these shores---the rule of law, has survived. (
Roger Cohen, I see, has many of the same thoughts, as I am sure many others do as well.)
It
is a bit early to be certain, and the excessive pre-occupation with
"turning the page" is not a good sign, but it appears that a fair
number of our fellow Americans have belatedly recognized that we are
not a country of torturers, of "rulers" whose "word" becomes law, but a
republic, founded on a respect for the rights of the minority, while
otherwise generally allowing for the vote of a majority to determine
the course of our country.
We are not a country where the
President "takes us to war" but one where war is only waged when
Congress, made up of people we have sent to represent us, agrees. We
are also a country under which the President may "make Treaties" only
"by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate" which makes me
wonder why only the Iraqi Parliament gets to vote on the status of
forces agreement, but it is Thanksgiving and I will give it a rest for
a day or so.
The Times
compares our nation as waking up as Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz
but to me, it is more like Rip Van Winkle. The trauma of the stolen
2000 election followed by 9/11 (a month after the incompetent who was
"awarded" the presidency failed to be stirred by an intelligence report
warning of just such an attack) just knocked our country out and we
sleepwalked our way until somehow, Katrina woke us up.
So, I am
grateful to George W. Bush for showing us again the consequences of
such irresponsible behavior. Ben Franklin's warning that the founders
gave us a republic "if you can keep it" never had so much more
resonance.
A Postscript
When this was first posted, I
forgot all about Arlo for some reason. But, as someone reminded
me,there is no question that the first Thanksgiving introduced
socialism to this continent. As for Arlo, maybe I will listen
on WFUV at noon, as is traditional (a tradition begun, of course, at the late WNEW-FM) or maybe I will just play it myself.