Thanks for What?
I love Thanksgiving for its illusion of abundance. It brings back early childhood memories of the one day each year during the Depression when the food on my family’s table was not the leftover produce that my Uncle Leon could no longer sell at his stall, or the nearly spoiled organ meats that our local butcher offered at a steep discount.
But Thanksgiving day was quite the opposite, and while I obviously can’t recall what was served in 1936, the year I was born, the holiday was soon seared into my childhood memory as the day when the good times looked upon us in the form of charity gift baskets from philanthropists of various religious and political orders, much like the needy will be served today in volunteer kitchens across America and just as soon will be forgotten.
It did not take long before I was old enough to realize that the largesse of Thanksgiving was the rare exception, and that “just getting by,” as my mother’s brave optimism would have it, was the norm. Getting by, thanks to Mom’s piecework in the downtown sweatshops and my mechanic father’s signing on to one of the New Deal’s public jobs programs.
Then came the economic miracle of World War II, dismissed in its day by some Republicans as Franklin Roosevelt’s treachery, and my parents and other relatives got their jobs back. The relevance of the wartime jobs to Thanksgiving in our family was that my Uncle Edward, the welder, was rewarded every year at his plant with one enormous turkey or two smaller ones.
The result was what I recall as an annual day of bloating, as if my extended family was frantically storing calories in preparation for a severe economic winter that was certain to return. But for us it didn’t return. Not with the good union jobs that abounded in the postwar boom and the opportunities provided by the GI Bill and the spread of affordable college education that made upward mobility a truly plausible American goal.
Every time I need to be reminded of what was done for my generation in the way of generous government-funded programs, I reread the part of Colin Powell’s inspiring autobiography where he writes about the educational opportunities and vigorous community support programs that postwar kids in the Bronx were afforded. Powell and I were engineering students in the same class at the City College of New York, though I didn’t get to know him until he was famous and I spoke with him as a journalist. But the great opportunities available to us, as compared to what is available to the poor today, is a recognition we share.
I thought back to those buoyantly optimistic times at CCNY, the working-class Harvard as it was justifiably called, last week when students protesting onerous tuition hikes at the University of California got pepper-sprayed for their efforts to keep hope alive. The once excellent and very affordable UC system, like the publicly funded colleges of New York and elsewhere across the country, was the proud boast of moderate Republican and Democratic politicians who believed as did the nation’s Founders that equal opportunity leading to a land of stakeholders was the essential bedrock of America’s experiment in democracy.
No more. On this Thanksgiving we have been cheated of the bounty of that harvest as the stakes have been pulled up on 50 million Americans who have lost or soon will lose their homes. The housing crisis haunts a majority of Americans, even those who own their homes outright but have lost their jobs and must now sell in a downward-swirling housing market.
Good public education on every level, from preschool through college, is now a matter of inherited privilege reserved for those who can pick and choose affluent neighborhood settings for their children’s schools. And the prospect of affording one of those settings is dim for most parents in a country where securing a good job is beyond the reach of so many highly motivated people.
How many folks from my generation are honestly sanguine about the economic future of their children and grandchildren? What I have heard constantly, and just this week from a former top investment banker addressing a college class I teach, is that our offspring probably will face a decade of lost opportunity. I thought back to my college days and how shocked any of us, even those from the most impoverished of circumstances, would have been to hear such a prediction.
As The New York Times editorialized this Thanksgiving, “One in three Americans—100 million people—is either poor or perilously close to it.”
A bummer of a message, I know, until I think of those pepper-sprayed college students linking arms, and of all the Americans, young, old and between, who have occupied their minds with a challenge—that it doesn’t have to be this way. For their brave spirit of resistance we should be most grateful this Thanksgiving.
This article was originally posted on Truthdig.
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19 comments on "Thanks for What?"
November 26, 2011 8:34am
This articulate and thoughtful essay on the current state of affairs should inspire us all to find some way to participate in the movement to stop it. If everyone did one small thing every day to get in the way of the financial war lords, the nexus would shift, albeit slowly. My mantra to myself is: stop complaining and do something! Good luck to us all.
November 26, 2011 6:49am
THE GOLDEN THREAD and the SILVER NEEDLE
Keep up the music!
All battles, since this is considered such, psychologically at least, are won by flanking. This is an 'experiment' of the unity of symmetric and asymmetric distributive laws of nature, formally being divided by traditions of old. The key is still, war, or the replacement of an Old Guard, now in charge of planetary SWAT, instead of its original intent, to SWAT cells. The cancer is created along with the heartbreak worldwide by African casino-like mindsets involved with drug lords and the like. Google Indira Singh and Guns and Butter for the golden thread needing the silver needle of a truly biological politic as opposed to the mechanical, particularly in this age of electronic landscape cultural transformation. Al-Qaeda is www.GoAgile.com, make no mistake. In fact, this larger issue is with error, or evidence, but 'error' is better.
So, the last point is what error are the 'traditionalists' maintaining their fudge factory for? Note that www.OccupyBuilding7.org was stated to begin the week Occupy Wall Street was shut down, November 19 and 20, and the time Lynn Margulis passed.
World Justice, TheHague 2012
November 25, 2011 8:02pm
Moneychangers and their cronies are exercising power without responsibility. I amd sure you believe that all this is part of Christian virtues
November 26, 2011 6:01am
Matthew, I don't know why you're wasting your time and ours. Everyone reading and posting on this site is far too intelligent to fall for your anti-American, Red-Chinese philosophy. "We The People" all know Ronald Reagan was an enemy of this democracy, who thought it's citizens were "the problem". Aparently you think that too. Wouldn't you be happier in China - or at least posting on Fox News?
November 26, 2011 8:52am
Thank You Thank You Jaydee for that inspirational Message
Now from Ward Six Our very on He likes to be called" King George" Lets give a
Happyland Greeting to King George
November 25, 2011 5:50pm
The abundance is still there, it's just that the greedy 1% wants to hog it all and won't share with anybody else.
November 25, 2011 5:22pm
Matthew Jacobs
Moneychangers and their cronies are exercising power without responsibility in the U S today. And the consequences are painful to the poor and the dwindling middle class!
I am sure you believe that all this is part of Christian virtue if one goes by your remark
November 25, 2011 7:09pm
BMNIAC
Not sure which remark you are referring to. If it is about Gratitude please take note the Nobility of Gratitude is not just a Christian thing and in fact Philosophers have written about Gratitude long before Jesus cast his first Net. My point to Mr Scheer is his comments above focus on the Material World which is what Leftism dwells on.
November 25, 2011 3:11pm
Frozen pizza is a vegetable and other great American myths debunked:
We have a free market capitalist economy. Bailouts, subsidies, monopoly powers, price fixing, political bribery as a standard operating procedure to gain favorable legislation are not features of a “free market“. In fact, our “best and brightest” no longer aspire to the overall enhancement of the system, but to game it, often doing everything in their power to sabotage enterprises in order to reap huge profits from their fall. That’s not free market capitalism. That’s conspiracy, collusion and fraud.
We are the freest people on earth. I’d like to give a little more study to the nations that gave sanctuary to our fugitive slaves before commenting.
We are a nation founded on the principle that all men are equal. Just not the Blacks, the native Americans, the Muslims, the Catholics, the Asians, the Latinos , the eastern Europeans, the southern Europeans, the landless……. or women.
We are a democracy. You can have a nation that sanctions the bribery of public officials, or you can have a representative democracy. The one will always preclude the other.
We support the spread of democracy throughout the world. Only when it mirrors our narrow, conservative, capitalistic version of it. In fact, the US has acted to overthrow or undermine far more democracies than it has fostered.
We may have many poor, but we have the richest poor class in the world. The “poor” of Canada and other industrialized nations have far greater access to adequate health care, decent housing and a good education.
We are a peace loving nation that embraces Christian values. Go to: History of U.S. Military Interventions since 1890.
Frozen pizza is a vegetable. Frozen pizza is a bread, high sodium and processed cheese laden carbohydrate.
November 26, 2011 8:55am
Evders
Finish the quote:
"We are a nation founded on the principle that all men are equal" "UNDER THE LAW".
.
In fact, the US has acted to overthrow or undermine far more democracies than it has fostered.
Evders
No it is not a fact... and In fact I am going to Challenge you to back up your words.I'll Start
France under the Vichy
Japan under the Feudal System
YOUR TURN DEMOCRACIES THE US HAS OVERTHROWN?
.
One last thing be I go.
We may have many poor, but we have the richest poor class in the world. The “poor” of Canada and other industrialized nations have far greater access to adequate health care, decent housing and a good education.
.
Have you been paying attention to the news lately
Those industrialized nations with all their freebies you quoted
Well, their Broke, out of other Peoples Money or Time to pay the piper has Come.
November 27, 2011 2:26am
Canada has had a healthier economy for years and has pursued a moderate policy of stimulus spending on infrastructure improvements since the 2008 crash.
November 26, 2011 7:27pm
...."Those industrialized nations with all their freebies you quoted
Well, their Broke, out of other Peoples Money or Time to pay the piper has Come."
--------For all of your life, you or someone you know, may have gone without healthcare. Those peoples have enjoyed a better quality of life, and your country is broke and out of money too. Only difference is NOW the money will finance free medical benefits for all of Asia and we will only fall further and further behind in thew rankings of life qualities.
The United State's CIA backed, and armed the overthrow of the Democratically elected leader of IRAN and installed the Shah and his dictatorial reign of terror.
Venezuela's Chavez is DEMOCRATICALLY elected, and we even tried to overthrow HIM.
We installed a dictator in the very first country we CREATED; Panama
Google THAT!
Robert, I always enjoy your insightful articles. Keep up the good work.
Gary, new Zealand
November 25, 2011 12:31pm
A great article. I am 84, a WW2 vet educated on the GI BIll and now on SS and Medicare after leading a highly productive life as a Ph.D. physicist/entrepreneur. I remember the depression and the rescue from it by the New Deal. I went through all that you described so accurately. Thanks for your courage in saying it like it is.Ned Rasor
November 26, 2011 7:28pm
A humble "thank you" for your service, sir.
November 25, 2011 11:35am
Mr Sheer Gratitude in my opinion is one of Mankind's greatest Signs of Character.
But you express the Lefts core belief that things are the Nexus to everything you Believe. You bemoan that others don't have as much as they/you want them to have. Sir you seem light on Character
November 25, 2011 8:13pm
You sir, seem to be light in Humanity.
November 26, 2011 7:29pm
RIGHT ON, HERMIT48
#OCCUPY EVERYWHERE.....
November 25, 2011 11:21am
Good article. Thanks so much.