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Reply to "Should so called “thanksgiving” be a national day of mourning?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]No. Screw off. We don’t care about your pet political causes and the gaping hole in your personality that causes you to promote this kind of stuff. Don’t care about about the claims and fairy wishes of indigenous groups or “land-back advocates”. We tolerate some of this crap in the name of good manners and being charitable. But there’s a limit. It is a glorious day of national Thanksgiving. I am very grateful that European religious settlers founded the greatest civilization on earth, committed by its founding documents to ideals that [b]were never, not once, within the founding spirit of any prior society. [/b] And not for nothing, but if the North American indigenous peoples had had the ability to cross the Atlantic and the firepower, once there, to seize land and conform the local peoples to their customs, they would have done so without question. Many were very warlike and inclined toward expansion and capture on the continent. (As were most cultures of the era.) We just happen to be much more advanced and way better at war. To the victor belongs the spoils. [/quote] Maybe tangential but what are these "ideals" that you say were never within the "founding spirit" of any society? I don't think we need to ban Thanksgiving, but maybe we do need to do a WAY better job at education....[/quote] Can you name a single society with those ideals at it's core? [/quote] I asked you to name the ideals you are talking about. You didn't.[/quote] I'm also confused if these are the ideals of the Puritan religious separatists in Massachusetts Bay or the speculative capitalists who settled the Jamestown Colony? Or are we talking about the ideals of the Founding Fathers, who voted to codify the enslavement of human beings into the nation's founding documents (which was, I have to admit, a first among nations)? [/quote] Freedom and justice for all. I'll aspire to these. You can aspire to whatever you please.[/quote] Assuming you are the first person I asked the question- it is your contention that the settlers from the 1620s held the same ideals as the framers 150 years later AND that these ideals of "freedom and justice" were "never, not once, within the founding spirit of any prior society"?[/quote]
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