Happy Thanksgiving

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We at PS hope you will have a great Thanksgiving Day with your friends and family. We really do have a lot to be grateful for in this country!

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23 Responses to Happy Thanksgiving

  1. Soaps says:

    People should remember the true origin of Thanksgiving. It had nothing to do with turkeys and friendly Indians. It was a celebration of the Pilgrims’ narrow escape from their misguided experiment in socialism, which they had tried in the first year with disasterous results.

  2. Peggy says:

    Happy Thanksgivings Day to you all too.

    And thank you for all you do to bring us Post Script.

  3. Pumpkin Pie Guevara says:

    Re Peggy’s:

    Happy Thanksgivings Day to you all too.

    And thank you for all you do to bring us Post Script.

    Ditto

  4. Cherokee Jack says:

    Happy Thanksgiving to you, and thanks for all the time and effort you put into this blog.
    Jack

  5. Toby says:

    Happy Thanksgiving to all of you. I do mean all of you.

  6. Tina says:

    Today I’m particularly thankful for the fine men and women who serve in our military. I ran across this article today and thought I’d share it:

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/11/24/MN401M0JGJ.DTL

  7. Pumpkin Pie Guevara says:

    Re Soaps’: People should remember the true origin of Thanksgiving. It had nothing to do with turkeys and friendly Indians. It was a celebration of the Pilgrims’ narrow escape from their misguided experiment in socialism, which they had tried in the first year with disasterous results.

    Just to set the record straight, it wasn’t known as socialism back then. It was correctly identified as stupidity, and it only took a year. Could it be that way back then people were smarter than they are today?

  8. Peggy says:

    Just got home from my first Thanksgiving with about 30 firefighters and their families at my son’s station in Sacramento. The food was delicious and great fun watching all the little ones playing while the football game played and all the cooks carved, chopped and mashed.

    I’d never thought before how many families spend their holidays at a fire or police station, but there were plenty of people who had from the number of pies that were brought in by people who just wanted to say thank you. I’ll be baking a couple of extra ones for Chico stations at Christmas.

    I join Tina in thanking our military men and women, but also want to thank all those that serve here at home to keep us and our homes safe too.

    We actually made it through dinner, but not dessert before the alarm went off and all engines rolled out the doors. Another first for me to stand in the bay and watch my son go off to fight a fire.

    On the way home up hwy 65 I had to pull over three times for ambulances and fire trucks. Just after I left Lincoln my son called from a hospital where hed taken a homeless, sick man. It was a very different and busy night. God be with you all and keep you safe. Thank you for giving. Cant wait to see everyone again for Christmas.

  9. Toby says:

    Did anyone else notice the usual suspects did not care to wish anyone a Happy Thanksgiving. Something else to be thankful for, not being one of them.

  10. Post Scripts says:

    Toby, yeah I noticed, maybe they don’t believe in celebrating this part of our history? …(sigh)

  11. Post Scripts says:

    That’s a wonderful story Peggy, thanks for sharing it with us. Your son is one of our hero’s.

  12. Peggy says:

    Maybe they all got invited to dinner by a 1% who could afford to feed them. Hope they got to take home some leftovers so they could make a sandwich to take to OWS protest.

  13. Tina says:

    Soaps you are so right…a great recounting of the roots of our tradition of thanksgiving, including the failure of the collectivist beginning recorded by William Bradford, can be read at The Patriot Post, here:

    http://patriotpost.us/reference/the-first-thanksgiving

    After abysmal results in 1622, Bradford realized that his collectivist plan had undermined the incentive to produce, noting that it “was found to breed much confusion and discontent, and retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort.” The women complained that being forced into servitude for others was “a kind of slavery,” and some men had become “servants to the Indians” for a mere “capful of corn.” Others had perished.

    Bradford recorded in his journal that the Colony leaders “began to think how they might raise as much corn as they could, and obtain a better crop than they had done, that they might not still thus languish in misery. At length after much debate of things, (I) (with the advice of the chiefest among them) gave way that they should set corn every man for his own particular, and in that regard trust to themselves. And so assigned to every family a parcel of land.”

    They decided to trade their collectivist plan for a free market approach, and in 1623, Bradford wrote, “This had very good success, for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been by any other means the Governor or any other could use. … Women went willingly into the field, and took their little ones with them to set corn.
    Instead of famine now God gave them plenty and the face of things was changed, to the rejoicing of the hearts of many. … Any general want or famine hath not been amongst them since to this day.”

    Property ownership and families freely laboring on their own behalf replaced the “common store,” but only after their ill-advised experiment with communism nearly wiped out the entire settlement.

    The Colony celebrated a much greater Harvest and Thanksgiving Day in 1623.

  14. Libby says:

    What are you talking about? Socialism, as a political construct, was a couple hundred and years off.

    Are you, perhaps, referring to their efforts to establish a society in keeping with Christ’s teachings?

    If you feel this was foolish, I think you should say so, explicitly.

  15. Tina says:

    Libby: “Are you, perhaps, referring to their efforts to establish a society in keeping with Christ’s teachings?”

    And what teachings would those be, Libby?

  16. Libby says:

    Tina, the man was a commie. That’s why all he gets from capitalist Christians is lip service.

    You cannot know how irritating this is.

  17. Tina says:

    Not good enough Libby. I want you to tell me why you believe Christ was a communist. If you can’t, then you need to knock it off.

  18. Toby says:

    Tina don’t you remember the huge picture of Jesus that hung in Red Square whenever they had a military parade! What is wrong with you? lol

  19. Tina says:

    Ahh geez, I forgot…palm slap to the forehead…DOEEEEE!

  20. Toby says:

    So does that mean Jesus is the father of communism? Could explain why red is the predominate Christmas color. Hey now, Jesus had a beard, Lenin had that silly little beard like thing and Santa has a beard, something to think about. Oh and what is one of the top three things placed on top of a Christmas tree, a STAR!

  21. Post Scripts says:

    Why bring up Jesus Libby? You’re not into that stuff and he was not even political so why go there? You’re not trying to deliberately offend Christians are you?

  22. Tina says:

    Say I think you’re on to something, Toby. In fact…we could stretch this a bit to include others that better reflect the values and ideals of the faith.

    Red is the favored color of that pillar of love and kindness, Hugo Chavez, although I have to admit he has no beard, unlike his mentor, Castro.

  23. Toby says:

    Libby is a liberal that means she will be or believe in whatever the moment calls for. If need be she would be anti-abortion and pro-gun.

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