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Happy Thanksgiving

Nov 22, 202339 min
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Episode description

We're discussing the history and meaning of Thanksgiving. King James was persecuting the Puritans in England, so this group, called Separatists, left their country in pursuit of religious freedom. After years in the Netherlands, they eventually sailed to the New World and landed in Plymouth, MA. Under the leadership of William Bradford, the pilgrims suffered losses and found success, giving thanks to God the entire time.

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Transcript

Attention. You're listening to the Tod Huff Radio show, America's home for conservative not Bitter talk radio. Be advised. The content of this program has been documented to prevents and even cure liberalism, and listening may cause you to lean to the right. Here's your Conservative but Not Bitter host, Tod Huff. Well, Greeting's my friends. Here we are on Thanksgiving Eve. As I've shared with you in the past, as I'm going to tell you again today,

this is maybe I shouldn't have this. Maybe it's kind of like children. Maybe you shouldn't have a favorite episode of the year, like you shouldn't have a favorite child. You all do you know that you do? You know? I asked my kids, often ask my kids, which one of you thinks who's my favorite? And I love it. They all think that they're my favorite. We've got three and they all think that they are my favorite, which I think is the way it should be. Anyway, this

is my favorite episode of the year. Whether I'm supposed to have it or not, I do. And as I go through this today, I'll explain the reasons why. But today we are going we're going to share the true story of Thanksgiving now I have shared this yesterday. I made this abundantly clear this episode and this is one. There's two main reasons why this episode is so special to me. Number One, Thanksgiving their neck and neck to me. But I'll say that Thanksgiving, I think is my favorite holiday. And

there's several reasons for that. One reason is because I do believe that Thanksgiving is the purest, the purest of the holidays. I think that Thanksgiving is the one that is the least commercialized. I know what's on the well, what comes directly after Thanksgiving is Black Friday and all that. I know that, and I know that that's arguably the most commercialized moment of the year.

However, Thanksgiving itself, I think largely is still not highly commercialized. It's not something that is, you know, with with Santa and things that happen around Easter and just I don't know, it seems less commercialized to me, at least in my way of thinking. I also like that it's pretty straightforward. I'm a lover of the Thanksgiving Day food. Thanksgiving turkey, we have

noodles. I'm blessed to still have my grandmother around. She insists, absolutely insists on making dinner and she makes noodles and they are fantastic, And I'm going to tell you, I'm going to have more than I probably should on Thanksgiving with the food, the Thanksgiving Day turkey, the Thanksgiving Day noodles in my case, and some pie or cake or something like that as well. And on top of that there's football and family. See, these are the

things that are the most important to me. Football not so much as I've gotten older, although I still kind of like to watch it. But anyway, so there's that portion of the reason why it is so meaningful to me. But the other reason, and of course the history behind the story, right and the meaning of the holiday, which we're going to get into.

But the other reason is this is something that when I first started listening to talk radio roughly in nineteen ninety nine, I don't know the first time I heard the Rush Lumball tell this story, the true story of Thanksgiving, but I know that I heard it from him, and of course I think that he when he had his program, I thought everyone else was playing for second place. Rush created this feel, this profession, this industry of talk radio,

and he had a profound impact upon me. I was a twenty was I twenty one, twenty two year old kid tuning into Rush Limbaugh for the first time. Senior. I think in college, working managing a standardbred horse farm, listening every day to the program, and I just I loved it.

I loved his craft. I felt like, I know, if I can do a fraction, have a fraction of the impact in the lives of people listening to my program that he had upon me, I will feel like I will feel like we've accomplished something because his impact upon me was profound. And so to hear him tell this, I'm reminded of him. I feel that bond that I had as I listened to him all those years ago in

the past. And of course he's been passed away for two and a half years, I guess now, but it takes me back down that memory lane, good memories, memories of listening to a program that I loved, listening to someone that I greatly tremendously admire. So with that being said, with that being said, I want to share with you the true story of Thanksgiving. So this is coming now. This is much the same way that Rush would have told it. It's based upon by the way, I'll even put

a link in today's show notes. If you want his book, I think you can still get the book. The book is called See I Told You So, See I Told You So. Though I'm slightly distracted here, there's a noise in the studio I cannot identify at the moment. I don't think that you could hear it, but I can certainly, I can certainly hear it. So this is based upon his book. He wrote two books.

I forget this was if this was the first or second book on This book that references the Thanksgiving story was in his books See I Told You So. The other book was called The Way Things Ought to Be. I forget which one was first. I know I've got this one. I think I've got both. I honestly don't know. He also later in his career wrote the Rush Revere series, which are children's books where he time travels and everything else. But this one was written at the beginning I suppose of his career See

I Told You So, and he shares the true story of Thanksgiving. I've also kind of put my own twist on it. There were some things that I don't think I understood until studying this that had become clearer to me, and I've studied this a lot. I've studied this a lot. You know. One of the best ways I think to learn something is to have to present on it. One of the best ways to figure out to just get the information is to put the pressure upon yourself to actually have to share that

information. I remember as a young Christian, very young Christian. I became a Christian at the age of fifteen, back in nineteen ninety three. I've shared that before, but I remember one of the first things that I did was I started in the church. I was attending teaching the five and six year olds. And I say teaching, I'm telling you right now. I

was learning alongside them. I was spiritually at the same place that they were as I was teaching, as we were playing Bible baseball, or as we were going through the stories of the Old Testament and coloring the sheets or whatever else. That was for me. But see what happens is when you have to learn it enough to tell someone else, it puts that healthy pressure upon you to learn it. So I've learned a lot about this because I have to talk about this now. I want to talk about this. I don't

say have to in some sort of say, extense of obligation. I'm saying this that it helps. So if you're wanting to learn something, I would say, put the pressure on yourself to have to teach it to somebody. I think that it's a good thing. Whether it's a Sunday school class, whether it's something at work, whether it's a book club, I don't know anyway. So Rush would always say this at the beginning of sharing the true story of Thanksgiving. If you went to public school, you probably learned the

story of Thanksgiving some version of this particular story. Of course, Rush would always include some sarcasm and hyperbole, which we will do as well in our own in our own way. But the Pilgrims found their way here to this nation. It would have been sixteen twenty. The Pilgrims stumbled upon Plymouth Rock. They missed their target destination, which was supposed to be by the way

northern Virginia. They were supposed to land northern Virginia and then make their way to the Hudson River, which is in present day New York, and that was where they were going to establish their colony. But because of weather and other events, they actually moved the landing point north and they landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Cape Cod area today, and they stumbled upon there, a bunch of you know, just goofballs

that didn't know what they were doing. They get off the ship. Of course there's nothing there. They land in November. It was a two month voyage across the Atlantic Ocean. It's cold. They went too far north. There's nothing there, and so they have to immediately try to survive the winter. And so that first winter comes and it was tough. But the Native Americans came along, Squanto and other natives in that particular tribe of Native Americans

that came along, and they saved the helpless, pathetic pilgrims. Again, this is there's some hyperbole and a little bit of fun exaggeration here, but this is the gist of it, right. You got a bunch of people that were religious. I left that part out. You may or may not learn that. If you did learn that, it's often looked upon as some sort of a derogatory thing. These super strict, no fun, hyper religious

people stumble upon the shores and they can't take care of themselves. The Native Americans come along teach them how to fish, teach them how to hunt, teach them how to catch beavers, and everything else help them survive. Then the Pilgrims in the fall of that following year have a big feast where they thank the Indians. Where they thank the Indians, they say, thank you for saving us. Here's a great feast. And that's how some textbooks portray

the story of Thanksgiving. Now there's some exaggeration and hyperbole there, but you get the drift. But there was a lot more. And Russia would say this, it's not that's not at all the main lesson of Thanksgiving. Now that doesn't mean that a lot of that didn't happen. That is a lot of that is true, and some of it, of course is not necessarily or not at all. But the general basis of that story is true. But that's not what Thanksgiving itself is really about. We have to ask ourselves

who thanked who and what were they thinking them for. That's part of the true story of Thanksgiving. So time out timeout is going to be taken to this particular point in time. I am going to try to figure out the source of this noise I am getting on occasion during the break. But a quick time out is in order. My friends, sit tight. You are listening here special day, my favorite episode of the year, the true story

of Thanksgiving, my favorite holiday. And it also helps me remember my favorite, absolute favorite, the one and only Rush Limbaugh at this particular time of year, my friends, sit tight. Back in just a minute. Welcome back to my friends. So here we are going through the day before Thanksgiving,

Thanksgiving Eve. We're talking about the true story of Thanksgiving. This again is to honor the late great Rush Limbo, but also share with you what I think is one of the best stories, especially as we celebrate the Thanksgiving season. So when we left off, we were talking about what a lot of folks had been taught in public scrul as Rush would say about the true story of Thanksgiving. Now, it is true absolutely that Native Americans helped the

Pilgrims. In fact, if you want to research this or look into this, there's one particular Native American named Squanto who was highly influential in helping the pilgrims do learn how to fish and hunt and so forth in the New World. So, but let's look deeper, deeper into the story of Thanksgiving. So back in the sixteen hundreds. King George the first was persecuting everyone that didn't comply and recognize that the state was the ultimate authority in all things religion,

how you live your life and so forth. And so there was a group of people that were called the separatists, that called Puritans, that we know as Pilgrims today. And these folks were hunted down, they were hunted

down, and they were punished sometimes. You know, the wording in the constitution, the wording in the constitution, excuse me, talks about cruel and unusual punishments and a lot of these separatists, these folks that did not want to comply with the state controlled Church of England were given some very cruel and unusual punishments. And so this group of separatists, known as the Pilgrims, they said, we've had enough of the religious persecution. We're gonna go.

We're gonna getting out of here. And so they first fled to the nation of Holland. They were there for eleven or twelve years, and you know, things improved in Holland. As Rush would say, they got to wear some wooden shoes and look at windmills and look at the tulips. Or whatever. But they lived in Holland for some time, and you know, it

wasn't perfect. They weren't completely free there religiously either. There is evidence to suggest that Bradford was concerned about the impact that culture was having on their community, negative impact. And there were reports that they also wanted to spread spread the gospel and so forth. So but for several reasons, one of those, of course, ultimately being they still weren't quite as free religiously as they had hoped to be, they decided that they were going to embark upon a

journey to the New World. Now we should know, we should know that a journey to the New world via ship in the sixteen hundreds was not anything like any of us can remotely relate to today. Neither is landing in a new world. In November, which is when they actually landed at Plymouth, Massachusetts, well that's actually when the ship took you know, set up itself in the harbor. They didn't actually leave the ship until they finished writing and

signing the Mayflower Compact. I think they didn't leave the ship until December, actually, but they landed, so to speak, they parked the ship in the harbor in November it's a sixty six day journey. Sixty I've seen sixty five and I've seen sixty six day journey across the Atlantic Ocean, you know, in the fall the North Atlantic. It wasn't a balmy trip and a

tiny little ship. This ship was tiny. I mean there are there are millionaires and billionaires today, billionaires that have yachts that are much more massive than what the Pilgrims came across on. And so they realized it was time to go. It was time to go to the New World. Now, a couple of things about this one. There were about forty pilgrims that decided to make this journey to the New World, and they wanted to establish religious liberty.

There might have been other reasons as well, but at the top of that list was being able to live their lives, which, of course, see living their lives is synonymous with being able to exercise religious liberty. Because they were devout people. These were one and the same thing to them, and so they wanted to be able to live their lives and live in accordance with their conscience, in worship of their creator as they chose. And so

they saw that was at the top of the list. Again, there could have been other reasons that I've alluded to, some of them I haven't, But nonetheless they decided to embark upon that journey, roughly forty of them. There were other people that were on that ship as well. We think there were one hundred and two total passengers. There could have been up to thirty

crew tiny ship. They knew they were going to face hardship, but living freely and worshiping God in accordance to their conscience was at the top of their priorities. So so so so a couple of things here. In order to get that ship, to get on that ship and to go to the New World, they needed they needed to have money, and so they had these merchant I think they were called merchant adventurers. These were people that were investors.

Basically, they were sponsors, and so they provided the funds required to make this trip happen. Now, these were investors, so they wanted to

be paid back. However, these investors, these investors had requirements. One of the requirements that the investors had was that everyone who was a part of the colony, the Pilgrims colony, which would eventually be known as the Plymouth colony because of where they landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts, this colony was going to be everyone had a common share, so everything they all owned it together. Every piece of land, every structure, everything was equally owned by everybody

in the community. This was a requirement that was put upon the Pilgrims, by the investors, by these merchant adventurers, if you will. And so that's important to file away in your memory for just just a little bit as we get through this story. So they get on the ship, they take a journey across the ocean sixty five sixty six days. They missed their target location. They end up in Massachusetts. As they're worked there in the bay,

they decide there was concern. The concern was we really are outside of the area we're supposed to be in. There was actually some dissension according to some of these reports and records and so forth, historical accounts as to what they should should do. And so they said, look, okay, we're going to establish this governing charter, right, so we're going to try to accommodate the fact that we're not really where we're supposed to be. These are

going to be our rules. Them are the rules Mayfi our Compact. And so William Bradford, who's the governor, the leader of this group, set out toy they pinned the Mayflower Compact. And these were laws that everybody agreed to live by. I think it was signed by forty one forty one people. The laws, by the way, were rooted firmly in the Bible, as you would expect from this group of very devoutly religious people. And so

these were people of faith. They came think about this, They came across the ocean with I mean truly just a wing and a prayer in a sense, right, And so they land. It's November. There's nothing there. It's desolate, it's bleak, it's there's no grocery stores, you know, I think, and this is something Rush would talk about, the fact that we we cannot relate to this. We cannot as average everyday Americans, we

cannot relate to this. Short of people who have been in extreme military situations or something like that, the average person, we can't relate to this. Right. We have a saying in America today we say first world problems. You know, we don't have Wi Fi, or if the coffee's not hot, or if the internet's down, or if our charge, our phone charge, we forgot it at home. This ruins days for people. These are things, the fact the Pilgrims would have been happy, problems they would have

been happy to have. They were talking about and focusing upon mirror survival. No shelter, no seven to eleven, no grocery store, no Walmart, no Target, none of that. No Uber, no Southwest Airlines, none of that. They had, none of that. They get off the ship, they have their Mayflower compact, they have their faith, but they're heading into the winter. They're heading into the winter. It's colder, there's nothing there, and they made a great sacrifice to get here. So pausing there

timeouts in order talking about the true story of Thanksgiving. My favorite, my absolute favorite. I know not supposed to have this. The more I say this, the more I realize I probably shouldn't be saying it, but I want to say it anyway because it's the truth. My favorite episode of the year. As I said earlier, you probably shouldn't have favorite episodes of the year, just as I shouldn't have favorite children of the year. Maybe that's

what I should do, pick a favorite kid for each year. They all think they're my favorite anyway, which is a good thing. But nonetheless this is my favorite episode timeouts in order, so type my friends more to say on the other side of the break back in a minute, Welcome back to my friends. Being prepared is a good thing. Being prepared for a natural disaster, being prepared for a power outage that may come with weather as we

enter into these colder months. We're talking about the Pilgrims going into colder months, colder times of the year. It's where we left off in our story. But it's a good thing to be prepared for those sorts of things and to anything the government may throw at us as well. So it may be a good idea to get a three month food supply from four Patriots. Four patriots dot com is the website. These supplies of food last for twenty five

years, to come in stackable storage. Toats, they have breakfast, they have lunch, they have dinner options. Go to four patriots dot com. That's the number four Patriots with ans dot com. Use promo code huff. It's my last name this time. Don't try to use the first name. You got to use the last name. Huff is the promo code saves you ten percent on your first order at four patriots dot com. So that's where we left off in the story. Was the Pilgrims facing a cold, bleak,

brutal first winter, and that's what they went through. Was a very very difficult time. Nearly half, approximately half of all the pilgrims died that first winner. Among those who died was Dorothy Bradford, the wife of Governor William Bradford. It was a very, very tough time. The Pilgrims did meet the Native Americans. Squanto and others were in that group. They helped them learn how to plant crops when the springtime came, to hunt, to fish, to skin beavers, all that sort of stuff, and so this

was very a critically important part of the process. I'm not saying that that's not the case, but remember this would now have been sixteen twenty one, sixteen twenty one. They landed in the November of sixteen twenty were now in the spring of sixteen twenty one. They're managing to survive. They weathered that first winter, but they took tremendous casualties, losing roughly half of the people in that group. So they were barely surviving, but they were not thriving.

They were not thriving. Now this is where the end of the story typically takes place. Because they planted some crops, they harvested some things, they hunt some you know, some they fish, they hunted some animals, and they were able to stock up a little bit, stock up a little bit, and they did have a feast. That first Thanksgiving was in November

of sixteen twenty one, Fall of sixteen twenty one. It should be pointed out, however, that ultimately these this deeply devout group of people were thinking not Look, they were appreciative of the Innans, they were thankful for the help of the Native Americans and so forth, but they were certainly not expressing ultimate gratitude of them. They were expressing gratitude ultimately to God. And we know we know this through several things. But the proclamation that George Washington made,

I'll put that in the today's show notes as well. The first Thanksgiving should read this thing I thought about reading, and it's it's not super long, but it's written in seventeen eighty nine verbiage, so it's a little difficult to maybe hear some of that. But nonetheless, the gratitude was ultimately to God. Not again, not that they weren't thankful to the Native Americans,

of course they were. But these were people that believed that they were called, and they believed that God was teaching them how to survive and was providing. So this, this is now where the rest of the story comes in. Paul Harvey, I'm a big fan of If you remember Paul Harvey, the rest of the story, this is the rest of the story. So sixteen twenty one, the first Thanksgiving, the Pilgrims still struggled. They still

struggled for a bit. In fact, if you read Bradford's diary, if you read some of the historical account, they struggled for a bit longer then in sixteen twenty three, so we're talking a couple of years later at this point. Incidentally, second Thanksgiving, Second Thanksgiving was held in sixteen twenty three, So in sixteen twenty three they had been still surviving, but not thriving,

not prospering. The Pilgrims decided. The Pilgrims decided that, well, Bradford decided, you know what, this this is a lot harder than it has to be. Remember that rule that I mentioned earlier the rule that was set into place by the the merchant adventurers, the investors in the Pilgrims. Remember, I said that they required that everyone in that colony have a common

share, have an equal amount of ownership. Everything was thrown in one bank, right, and so everybody owned the same percentage of everything that was produced. Bradford said, this is not helping us. In fact, this is hurting us. Why should one man? I mean, I don't have the diary in front of me. I'll post this stuff on the website and the stack of stuff if you want to read this. I'm just telling the story

right now. But Bradford basically said, you know, men started thinking, why should I be working for another man's family when I am having trouble providing for my own. What's the incentives? What's gonna I mean, there's nothing here. I get the same amount for working my tail end off as this other dude next to me gets for lounging around all day. There's something in

aparently not just about that. So Bradford said, this whole thing about having an equal share, and this is the lesson that Rush wanted us to learn, that we need to learn, and we need to pass on to that next generation. The lesson. The lesson is that socialism sucks is basically what it comes down to. And so Bradford said, to heck with all this, the requirements that were placed upon us by the investors aren't working. We're going to do something totally different. If not, may end up killing us

all. So what he did was he established this idea. They said, I'm going to give a plot of land to every family, and every family can do with that land whatever they deem to be appropriate. If they want to grow extra corn and sell it at market, then they can do that. They want to try to start some business, whatever, whatever they wanted to do. They wanted to try to I don't know, just whatever they

could do that made sense for them. And Bradford later recounts that this led to a tremendous amount of blessing, a tremendous amount of prosperity, so much so, my friends, that this is the point in time where they really began in full to trade and to sell with the Native Americans. They had so much, They had enough for themselves, and they had enough to sell

and trade. And this is where commerce and free markets really begin to get traction because now people Now people can prosper and begin to focus on the things that they're really good at. If you're really good at, I don't know, making horseshoes, and you can trade that activity, that work, that labor, that product for someone who produces, maybe they're really good at knowing when to plant, how to harvest, how to get the maximum yield for

their from their ground, and so forth. You know, why be average at everything? Why not work together in a free way where we exchange and trade and sell things so that the people that are very good at one thing can benefit from the people who are very good at another thing. Efficiencies take hold, prosperity increases for everybody. This is what the colony saw, and it blew the roof off. The colony met in a good way that their

their cups runneth over in that physical sense and in a materialistics. But it also fed their bellies. I don't mean that they were driving around in Mercedes and Lamborghinis. I mean they they actually had so much much blessing they couldn't it started to overflow. That of course, was the year they had the second Thanksgiving. So really, if you want to really get down to brass

tax. Here the story, the real story of Thanksgiving, isn't complete until we have the second Thanksgiving, because that is when prosperity not just the first Thanksgiving was about raw survival. The first Thanksgiving was about g whiz. That was a kick in the face. Right This Thanksgiving, which would have been celebrated two years after the first Thanksgiving, was in sixteen twenty one, the

second was in sixteen twenty three. That the time span between those two Thanksgivings is when Bradford put into motion this idea of free market capitalism, of the issuance the possession of private property and to be able to do what is in your best say interest, your family's best interests, with what you have and what you own, and the prosperity and the yield and everything that was created

as a response to that was incredible. And the Pilgrims, my friends, on that second Thanksgiving expressed their God for express their thanks to God for teaching them, for revealing to them this better way. And things happen in result as a result of this as well. So timeouts in order quick timeout.

Second Thanksgiving sixteen twenty three, prosperity has hit the Plymouth Colony because William Bradford did something extreme, what was viewed as extreme with the time, by giving a plot of land to families to do with what they determined to be best, and tremendous blessings resulted. My friends, sit tight. You're listening here

to the Thanksgiving Eve episode of the Todd Hoff Show. My absolute favorite of the year because it's my favorite holiday, because I can honor the late Great Rushlanvaalf from which all of this information I'm sharing with you ultimately has come from sitside. My friends back in just a minute. Welcome back, my friends. Going through the true story, the complete story, the rest of the story regarding Thanksgiving here on this Thanksgiving Eve, two thousand and twenty three.

So we kind of wrapped it up last segment, but ultimately William Bradford and the Pilgrims thanked God for showing them, for providing for them, and for showing them this better way for the prosperity. It allowed them, by the way to pay I didn't finish this part of the story. The profits allowed them to pay off their debts. It encouraged other people to come to the new world. This was the beginning of the explosion of the Great Puritan Migration.

By the way, I write about this as well in this week's column. If you want to get that, you can. It actually goes out today todd haveshow dot com slash column. If you want to read it, I'll have links in there as well, or if you want to have anything in the show notes that I've referenced, I'll put some show notes together that you can take a look at as well. So, but that's the story of Thanksgiving, my friends. So that said, I want to take a

time out. I want to come back here and express on the other side of the break my gratitude to you, my friends. Sit tight back in just a minute. Welcome back to my friends. Not a lot of time I was talking with us here during the break. I think I said King George was the king, and King James. King James. The first was the king, I believe when this all happened in the sixteen hundreds with the Pilgrims in England. Anyway, that aside for the moment, I just want

to take this moment. I guess there's a third reason why this means so much to me. This episode zig Ziglar used to say that the healthiest of all human emotions is gratitude. And my friends, I am incredibly grateful. I mean, I'm grateful to this nation. So I don't understand people who hate this nation. It's not perfect, the my, oh my, this nation has been a shining city on a hill, a beacon of hope for so so many. I'm thankful for my family, I'm thankful for this show.

I'm thankful for my life. I'm thankful for Jesus. I'm thankful for so many things. But in that group, my friend, at the heart of that group, I'm telling you, is you. I'm thankful to rush for the trail that he blaze, that I can benefit from and I learn from so many things. But my friends, I am in tremendous h just I am tremendously grateful for you, those who have listened from the very beginning, those who have started even today. Thank you very much. Have a

wonderful Thanksgiving. We will see you Monday. Stg

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