On Thanksgiving
by Nancy SalvatoLooking at the Atlantic Ocean off the Virginia Beach coast, I occasionally see US Navy ships on the horizon, F-18 Hornets flying in formation, the Coast Guard helicopter overhead, and porpoise darting in and out of the waves; it’s just a part of the scenery. Having lived in Glenview, Illinois, in the years prior to the naval base closing, and outside Annapolis, Maryland, for a year, I’m very used to seeing our men and women in uniform and experiencing a military presence where I reside. What changes for me is a deeper appreciation for the job our military performs and for the freedom we cannot take for granted.

Most of the time I can go about my life following a routine that includes working on the Constitutional Literacy curriculum for our BasicsProject.org website, writing articles about the relevance of our Fundamental Law, taking my daily constitutional along the beach, and performing the chores that demand my attention, but never far from these distractions is the daily reminder that there are men and women who have dedicated themselves to our security; who have placed their lives in harm’s way to protect this absolutely ordinary life I am privileged to lead.
Perhaps the best way to really understand this reality is to contrast it with another. Around the world there are people who live in countries where citizens have never experienced the freedoms that our government was instituted to protect, who will never have the opportunities afforded to Americans to innovate, lead, and maintain the lifestyle to which we are accustomed. It is almost obscene to think that in some countries, children are subject to diseases long eradicated in our own country, hungry because there is never enough food to satisfy their appetites, and whose safety is at risk because fighting factions are unconcerned about the accidental loss of life during skirmishes and all out war between groups vying for power.
Every four years we experience an election in this country in which power of office is transferred peacefully from one person to another. How many Americans have endured a coup, war between an enemy power and our troops on native soil, or lived with the uncertainty which can stem from a majority faction taking power and changing the laws under which we operate. This is because our written Constitution was designed to preserve our rights while providing the stability to grow stronger and wealthier as a nation.
On this Thanksgiving, I give thanks for being fortunate enough to live in the United States of America; free from hunger, sheltered and safe. I give thanks to the Founders and Framers who understood the opportunity freedom from British rule presented. I give thanks for teachers who understand the difference between education and indoctrination and who do not treat people differently based on color, class, or religion. I give thanks for the consistency of family, for the unknown which lies ahead, and for the simple fact of being alive on November 24, 2012.
And to all those reading this commentary, have a blessed Thanksgiving.






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11 Comments
There is no fortune or luck involved in being born an American. Our ancestors built this country through blood, sweat, and tears.
There is no question that the United States of America IS the greatest country ever born. While our US Constitution has held up for over 200 years, many counties have had to rewrite theirs and form new governments 10-20 times in 75 years. For this alone, I am truly thankful for.
Sadly, with COTUS and the many Presidents who have usurped their powers over the many years trying turn this country into Socialism, at best, we are on the precipice of having to 'reboot' this country. Not to rewrite our Constitution, but to return back to the values, principles and morals on which it was founded.
I have to say I was privileged at the young age of 18 to have visited 2 Iron Curtain Communist countries. I say 'privileged' because I was rudely awakened to see and learn at how blessed I was being an American – living in the "Land of the Free".
My sincere thanks and gratitude to our troops. What you have had to endure, I can only imagine. Thank you.
Thank you, for your article.
As bad as some claim our country to be, why is it that so many wish to live here? We are not perfect nor do we claim to be, but we keep on working to make it better. In fact, even with all our real and perceived faults, the US is still the best country in the world to live, work, worship freely, and to raise a family.
Be thankful for our blessings on this very special of days. May God bless each and everyone.
I think as Americans we have a lot to be thankful for. Even with Obumble in office. I will be very thankful when he is sent home back to Chicago next November where Obumble he can golf all he wants. Obumble then re-acquaint himself with his old buddies William Ayers and Wrong Reverend Right and Rahm Dead Fish Emanuel. I will be thankful when this horrible night mare is over and we can go on to bigger and better things and not be looked at as a laughing stock in the wold.
Thank you for your post Nancy. May you and yours enjoy a wonderful feast on this day when we, as Americans, give thanks for the blessings we receive.
To all current and former military members and their families: thank you for the sacrifices that you endure for all of us. May God bless you and keep you safe.
My wife is one of those who can remember the two sides of living under a colonial power. When everything is working as intended life was bearable, but when things went terribly wrong, life could and did turn nasty in Formosa (Taiwan) during and even after world war two.
Now she sees mobs of idiots, an arrogant and disconnected President intent on his own agenda, whatever that is, political polarization, new laws for this and that, and feels old childhood fears arising again.
We still have a lot to thankful for, but a growing list, it would seem, of things of wary of this Thanksgiving.
If you really want to respect our servicemen and women, stop sending them off to fight in foreign wars. They swore an oath to protect the United States, not some far off foreign country full of ungratefuls that don't even like us.
For me, Thanksgiving is now above all an occasion for gratitude: for friends and family, for my extraordinary good fortune in having been born where and when I was, with abundant opportunity to act in a way that Aristotle described as the formula for eudaimonia, for human happiness, i.e., the free exercise of one’s faculties and talents, whatever they may be. Writing and posting my thoughts on different topics provides an opportunity not only to express my own gratitude for the favors Providence has bestowed, but also to thank you my fellow posters.
Happy Thanksgiving!
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!!
http://www.popmodal.com/video/10439/HAPPY-TURKEY-...
While our US Constitution has held up for over 200 years, many counties have had to rewrite theirs and form new governments 10-20 times in 75 years. For this alone, I am truly thankful for. Sadly, with COTUS and the many Presidents who have usurped their powers over the many years trying turn this country into Socialism, at best, we are on the precipice of having to 'reboot' this country. realestate
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