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November 27 2008
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The History of Thanksgiving

By Gary North

Thanksgiving Day is an old tradition in the United States. It had its origins in Plymouth Colony, in the fall of 1621, when the Pilgrims who had survived the first year invited Chief Massasoit to a feast. He showed up with 90 braves and five deer. The feast lasted three days.

The first official Thanksgiving Day was celebrated on June 29, 1676, in Charlestown, Massachusetts, across the Charles River from Boston. Over a century later, George Washington proclaimed a day of Thanksgiving on October 23, 1789, to be celebrated on Thursday, November 27. In 1863, Abraham Lincoln officially restored it as a wartime measure. The holiday then became an American tradition.

Lincoln was a strange contradiction religiously. He was a religious skeptic, yet he invoked the rhetoric of the King James Bible on many occasions. His political rhetoric, which had been deeply influenced by his reading of the King James, was often masterful.

For example, when he spoke of the cemetery of the Gettysburg battlefield as "this hallowed ground," using the King James word for holy, as in "hallowed be thy name," he was seeking to infuse the battle of Gettysburg with sacred meaning, a use of religious terminology that was as morally abhorrent as it was rhetorically successful. It is the sacraments that are sacred, not monuments to man's bloody destructiveness. In that same year of 1863, he used biblical themes in his October 3 Thanksgiving Day proclamation.

It is the duty of nations as well as of men to own their dependence upon the overruling power of God; to confess their sins and transgressions in humble sorrow, yet with assured hope that genuine repentance will lead to mercy and pardon; and to recognize the sublime truth, announced in the Holy Scriptures and proven by all history, that those nations are blessed whose God is the Lord.

He went on, in the tradition of a Puritan Jeremiad sermon, to attribute the calamity of the Civil War to the nation's sins, conveniently ignoring the biggest contributing sin of all in the coming of that war: his own steadfast determination to collect the national tariff in Southern ports.

In his proclamation, he made an important and accurate theological point.

We have been the recipients of the choicest bounties of heaven; we have been preserved these many years in peace and prosperity; we have grown in numbers, wealth and power as no other nation has ever grown.

But we have forgotten God. We have forgotten the gracious hand, which preserved us in peace and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us, and we have vainly imagined, in the deceitfulness of our hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and virtue of our own. Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to pray to the God that made us.

This observation leads to the same question that Moses raised long before Lincoln's proclamation: Why is it that men become less thankful as their blessings increase?

Less than a decade after Lincoln's proclamation, three economists came up with the theoretical insight that provides an answer.

Marginal Utility Theory

In the early 1870s, Karl Menger, William Stanley Jevons and Leon Walras simultaneously and independently discovered the principle of marginal utility. Their discovery transformed economic analysis.

They observed that value, like beauty, is subjectively determined. Value is imputed a familiar Calvinist theological concept to scarce resources by the acting individual. Other things remaining equal, including tastes, the individual imputes less value to each additional unit of any good that he receives as income. This is the principle of marginal utility.

This can be put another way. We can say that each additional unit of any resource that a person receives as income satisfies a value that is lower on that individual's subjective scale of value. He satisfied the next-higher value with the previous unit of income.

This provides a preliminary solution to the original question. I call this solution the declining marginal utility of thankfulness. People look at the value of what they have just received as income, and they are less impressed than they were with the previous unit of income. They focus on the immediate, "What have you done for me lately?" rather than the aggregate level of their existing capital. They conclude, "What's past is past; what matters most is whatever comes next."

Modern economic theory discounts the past to zero. The past is gone; it is not a matter of human action. Whatever you spent to achieve your present condition in life is no longer a matter of human action. The economist calls this lost world "sunk costs."

There is a major problem in thinking this way. It is the problem of saying "thank you." The child is taught to say "thank you." He is not told to do this because, by saying "thank you," he is more likely to get another gift in the future. He is taught to say "thank you" as a matter of politeness.

The problem is, we look to the present, not to the past. We look at the marginal unit of economic decision-making and not at the aggregate that we have accumulated. We assume that whatever we already possess is well merited. Then we focus our attention on that next, hoped-for amount of income.

As economic actors, we should recognize that the reason why we are allocating our latest unit of income to a satisfaction that is lower on our value scale is because we already possess so much. We are awash in wealth. We are the beneficiaries of a social order based on private ownership and free exchange, a social order that has made middle-class people rich beyond the wildest dreams of kings a century and a half ago. Or, as P. J. O'Rourke has observed, "When you think of the good old days, think one word: dentistry."

About half of the Pilgrims who arrived in Plymouth in 1620 were dead a year later. The Indians saved the colony by showing the first winter's survivors what to plant and how to plant it in the spring of 1621. The Pilgrims rejoiced at that festival. They would say that they were graced and happy to be alive.

Ludwig von Mises wrote somewhere that Charles Darwin was wrong. The principle of the survival of the fittest does not apply to the free market social order. The free market's division of labor has enabled millions of people to survive today, who would otherwise have perished.

So, give thanks to God tomorrow, even if your only God is the free market. You did not obtain all that you possess all by yourself. The might of your hands did not secure it for you. A little humility is in order on this one day of the year.

 



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:
Perhaps more so today than in previous years, taking inventory of all the things you are thankful for can be an important exercise in positive reinforcement. I've said on several occasions that focusing on your fears -- and many are suffering from financial nightmares at the moment -- is the absolute worst thing you can do, as you tend to attract more of that which you focus your energy on.

I thought it would therefore be appropriate to include this great Guide to Gratitude from Lifehack.com. For the article in its entirety, please see the link under Sources above. But here's a condensed list of wonderful sites and articles offering positive practices and articles on gratitude and giving thanks, right in time for Thanksgiving.

The Power of Giving Thanks

A Powerful Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving to you all! 

I hope you will take a moment to express your gratitude for all the good things in your life on this and every day.


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Community Comments ( 92 )
Comment on this Article
  
  
clue-less
[ Joined on 05/08 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
19 Points        
   
 
Novice User

Happy Thanksgiving to you all, and to your families.  Those of us who are part of this community have much to be thankful for.  We have the opportunity to reach out to each other via this forum.  I am thankful for each one of you.  I used to be so depressed, I couldn't think beyond myself.  Then I realized, the more I thought 'outside' myself - the more I centered my thoughts around other people, the less concerned I would be about the problems in my own little world.  The more we think about our own problems, the more consumed we become with them, the less we think about others.  Yes, life is hard, but it is made easier by being thoughtful and supportive of others!  I am reminded of the old saying:  "United We Stand - Divided We Fall"   We do have a lot to be thankful for - especially those who are a part of our life!  Once again - I am thankful for each one of you!

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
samsonsdad
[ Joined on 11/08 ]  [ Posted on November 27, 2008]
6 Points        
   
Novice User
  Mercola

I totally agree with you. We have so much to be thankfull for. As we think outside ourself, and strive to serve others our lives will be blessed. There are so many doing so much for others, but they are seldom recongised. rest assured they are eventually. stay strong!

  
  
Lelia
[ Joined on 06/06 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
17 Points        
   
 
Novice User

Thankfulness does something physically, emotionally and mentally to us and our environment.  Happy Thanksgiving to you all.

Lelia

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
KelleyEidem
[ Joined on 11/07 ]  [ Posted on November 28, 2008]
6 Points        
   
Apprentice User
  Mercola

Amen, Lelia! Thankfulness and gratitude are like a supercharged mega-vitamin on steroids for all our cells.

I remember a woman from years ago who made the most delicious chocolate chip cookies you could ever want toeat. To this day, I have never eaten better cc cookies.

I asked her to show me how she made them which she was quite happy to do. We were in her kitchen making a batch when she told me her secret.

She said that when she makes the cookies, she focuses her love on what she was doing and on the people who might be eating her cookies. She said that was the secret difference between her cookies and others when they tried to follow her

simple recipe.

Her recipe was nothing different than what you might see in a book. She did use real butter. But so do a lot of other cookie makers. Her love made those cookies extraordinary.

By the way, I heard a doctor say that our thoughts increase receptors on our cells for those things we think about. He said part of it takes place in our hypothalamus, so there is a real part of our body doing this...it's not just some aerie fairy idea.

Well, maybe he's right or maybe he was wrong, but I think he was right because whenever I go back to thinking about those cookies, something is definitely going on when we hold and share our love.

We have many 'cookies' in our life to be thankful for. They are called brothers, sisters, parents, children, friends, coworkers, and the clerk at the grocery store.

I hope you share your cookies as often as you can. Be thankful and it will expand your life. It doesn't take a special event for it to happen. It just takes you to decide. Right now.

Thank you for reading my cookie to you.

The best to you.

Kelley Eidem Together we can cure cancer - one person at a time!

  
  
Tilapia2006
[ Joined on 05/07 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
16 Points        
   
 
Novice User

Happy thanksgiving to all.

We truly have a lot to be thankful for, the foremost of which is being thankful to our European ancestors who braved wilderness and savages, to civilize this continent and create one of the greatest civilizations in history. They faced a freezing unforgiving wilderness, the threat of waring tribals, and near starvation, but were undeterred, setting the foundation for the great nation which we live in today, giving us vast multitudes of things for which to be thankful. This is truly my favorite holiday.

And now ... it's time to prepare to set good eating on the back burner for a day or two and feast away. Have a great thanksgiving everyone!

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
pukamana
[ Joined on 11/08 ]  [ Posted on November 27, 2008]
7 Points        
   
Novice User
  Mercola

I appreciate your Gratitude, But I have to inject just a little Truth among your platitudes.

"being thankful to our European ancestors who braved wilderness and savages, to civilize this continent and create one of the greatest civilizations in history"

Those "SAVAGES" saved the Pilgrims lives, showed them what to eat, how to live, and welcomed them into their world.

To show their Gratitude, the White People  invited the "Native Americans" to dinner. Then Massacered them a few days later as they slept in their Village. By your "Brave Christian Soldier" ancestors.

These PEOPLE had religious, philosophical, environmental and Spiritual Knowledge and Daily awareness of their Creator. Daily Prayer was a staple of their lives.

The True Savages showed up in 1492 and have proceeded to rape and pillage ever since. Giving

Disease infested blankets to freezing Indian children is trully Christian Charity at it's best.

Good thing they were only "Savages"

All you fat cats being Thankfull one day a year and patting yourselves on the back for mindless exploitation makes me want to puke. My thanksgiving prayer is that you all wake up and Real-ize that Every One With a Belly-Button is a Child-of-the-Creator...

Europeans were arguing about whether the Sun revolves around the Earth or not, While the "savages" have all ways known the Earth revolves around the Sun.

this " greatest civilizations in history" has poisoned,polluted, the Earth, Air, Water, and Fire.  

Has millions of Children living in mal=nutrition, with no Health Care.

At least the Native Americans fed Everyone in the Tribe. Must be what made them "savages"

Perhaps one day the "civilized" will catch up to the "savages"......

Mercola
  
zozer
[ Joined on 11/08 ]  [ Posted on November 28, 2008]
3 Points        
   
Novice User
  Mercola

Just who are you calling savages, and do you consider the genocide of the indigenous people of this land, and the stealing of people of Africa and forcing them to work under inhumane conditions ,"civilized"?

Mercola
  
Apoztel
[ Joined on 07/08 ]  [ Posted on December 1, 2008]
-1 Points        
   
This user is BELOW novice level and all their comments need to be reviewed with great caution.
  Mercola

I agree with pukamana except that everyone who calls themselves Christians aren't.  "our European ancestors" claimed to be Christian, and left Europe to escape the persecutions of the Dark Ages, but then came here and persecuted the very people who saved their lives.  Then to add to that they stole and/or bought my ancestors from Africa and enslaved them. "Our European ancestors" didn't do anything brave or noble except for writing the Constitution. This country was built on the backs of African and Caribbean slaves and Chinese men.  "Our European ancestors" stole this land from the "savages" who just wanted to keep their land and forced them to live in reservations. When's the last time you've seen a Native American family? "Our European ancestors" took away the guns of the Native Americans who were bravely serving in the American army. People are so quick to call Native Americans savages because of their brutality to "our European ancestors", but fail to realize how savage "our European ancestors" are to the "savages", whose ancestors were far more intelligent than any one of "our European ancestors."

  
  
INKY DINKY
[ Joined on 10/07 ] [ Posted on November 26, 2008 ]
16 Points        
   
 
Novice User

Happy Thanksgiving!!!

 [ Reply ]
  
  
ladybug*
[ Joined on 05/08 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
12 Points        
   
 
This user is BELOW novice level and all their comments need to be reviewed with great caution.

kkrizs-I have a question for you.Just how far back are we supposed to go to restore the land to the original people?Do we go back to the time that the Britons killed or chased off the Picts/Do we go back to the time that the Mongols took the land of the Romans?I think its time to put all of the hate aside and move forward instead of people thinking of themselves as victims.We cant fix all of the ills of the world.We need to give thanks for what we have and concentrate on our own faults.Not the faults of everyone else.By your comments a person would think you live in another country or time.Get over it! Everyone one of us has the same history some where.My people came here to get away from oppression,people come here from all over the world to get away from oppression.It has happened everywhere in every time.I dont personally celebrate thanksgiving,but I do give thanks for all of my blessings.Happy day to you all

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
Apoztel
[ Joined on 07/08 ]  [ Posted on December 1, 2008]
-1 Points        
   
This user is BELOW novice level and all their comments need to be reviewed with great caution.
  Mercola

Everyone does not have the same history of being oppressed. There are those that are oppressed and there are those that oppress. Considering that oppression still occurs in this country and many others, it's an easy thing for someone who is not oppressed to say "Get over it!" Not that I'm angry or hateful to anyone. I think that the truth needs to be spoken.

  
  
G.P.K.Pillai
[ Joined on 11/08 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
9 Points        
   
 
Novice User

The first day of thanksgiving took place in 1637 amidst the war against the Pequots. 700 men, women, and children of the Pequot tribe were gathered for their annual green corn dance on what is now Groton, Connecticut. Dutch and English mercenaries surrounded the camp and proceeded to shoot, stab, butcher and burn alive all 700 people. The next day the Massachusetts Bay Colony held a feast in celebration and the governor declared "a day of thanksgiving." In the ensuing madness of the Indian extermination, natives were scalped, burned, mutilated and sold into slavery, and a feast was held in celebration every time a successful massacre took place. The killing frenzy got so bad that even the Churches of Manhattan announced a day of "thanksgiving" to celebrate victory over the "heathen savages," and many celebrated by kicking the severed heads of Pequot people through the streets like soccer balls.

The proclamation of 1676 announced the first national day of thanksgiving with the onset of the Wampanoag war, the very people who helped the original colonists survive on their arrival. Massasoit, the chief invited to eat with the puritans in 1621, died in 1661. His son Metacomet, later to be known by the English as King Phillip, originally honoured the treaties made by his father with the colonists, but after years of further encroachment and destruction of the land, slave trade, and slaughter, Metacomet changed his mind. In 1675 "King Phillip" called upon all natives to unite to defend their homelands from the English. For the next year the bloody conflict went on non-stop, until Metacomet was captured, murdered, quartered, his hands were cut off and sent to Boston, his head was impaled on a pike in the town square of Plymouth for the next 25 years, and his nine-year-old son was shipped to the Caribbean to be a slave for the rest of his life.

 [ Reply ]
Mercola
  
Sarah Brown
[ Joined on 06/07 ]  [ Posted on November 27, 2008]
8 Points        
   
Novice User
  Mercola

While it is true that the Pequot Massacre (also called the Mystic Massacre) took the lives of 700 Pequot in a   tragic conflagration, it is part of a very complex history in which the Pequot were involved in guerilla warfare trying to defend their claim to sell wampum, etc.

These tragedies occurred, in part because of the complex grab for power in the early colonial times.  Your account, G.P.K. runs the risk of over simplified revisionist history in which only one side is villified.

Be that as it may, the FIRST thanksgiving was 1621 in Massachusetts where relations with the Native Americans were favorable.  (Not 1637 in Connecticut).  The tremendous account of God's providence through Squanto, a Native American, is worth remembering.  He was originally captured and enslaved.  He then learned English, while away from his tribe (The Pautuxet).  In his absence his entire tribe died as a result of a plague.  Later freed by Christians who bought him and let him go, he returned and had to attach himself to another tribe.  When he found out what was happening with the struggling colony, he took what man meant for evil and let God use it for good by helping the Pilgrims survive.  They in turn thanked God for saving them from certain death through the help of Squanto.

It was in this context of true friendship that the first Thanksgiving was celebrated. It is sad that relations got worse later (e.g. 1637, the colonies were a new and savage place).  And no doubt the Connecticut colonists gave thanks after defeating their enemies.  But carefully working through the events of history is vital to pursuing truth.  Try looking up some of these people and events on Wikipedia for more details.

Mercola
  
Heather Marsh
[ Joined on 05/08 ]  [ Posted on November 27, 2008]
5 Points        
   
Apprentice User
  Mercola

I think there is a little confusion here - the Thanksgiving celebration is based on the affirmative event.

That said - the victor does write the history.

I am thankful that this age does allow for a wider view.

There is still much confusion in my own country as many change their world view.

My husband considers the Australian aboriginals to be predominantly a lazy race as they - in their original state - 'did not sow nor spin'- and are still resistent to participating fully in our lifestyle.

I regard their original lifestyle as more in tune with their environment, and even published a poem which compared them to the biblical Abel and our white civilisation as Cain. (I will post this shortly for comments)

The irony is that now many Australian Aboriginals are so successfully integrated that they are making major gains by using general Australian Law to lay claim to land and properties long developed. It is a bloodless coup which nonetheless has had some stunning results. The sadness is that those people which still hold to their original ways will not benefit.

Human history is full of nastiness and invasion, war and slavery - regarded very differently by the diverse participants. We study a much more detailed history than our forefathers in the hope that we will not repeat the inhumanities of the past.

  
  
ladybug*
[ Joined on 05/08 ] [ Posted on November 27, 2008 ]
7 Points        
   
 
This user is BELOW novice level and all their comments need to be reviewed with great caution.