George Washington thanksgiving proclamation.

#27
#27
Shush. Or should I say Fhufh?

He is trying to make the point that we should return to the ideals of the time Washington. You know. Scurvy. Leeches. Hangings. Plague. Twenty percent literacy. Slavery. Infant mortality. Duels. Pooping in the woods. No electricity. Worrying about bears and Indians.

You know. The good old days.

Ya the good ole days where the federal gov't was kept in it's place and the states had much more sovereignty to do as their populace wished. Of course the rest of that stuff can die in a fire.
 
#28
#28
Flashback to early Thanksgiving days.

To rectify this situation, in 1623 Bradford abolished socialism. He gave each household a parcel of land and told them they could keep what they produced, or trade it away as they saw fit. In other words, he replaced socialism with a free market, and that was the end of famines.

Many early groups of colonists set up socialist states, all with the same terrible results. At Jamestown, established in 1607, out of every shipload of settlers that arrived, less than half would survive their first twelve months in America. Most of the work was being done by only one-fifth of the men, the other four-fifths choosing to be parasites. In the winter of 1609-10, called “The Starving Time,” the population fell from five-hundred to sixty.

Then the Jamestown colony was converted to a free market, and the results were every bit as dramatic as those at Plymouth. In 1614, Colony Secretary Ralph Hamor wrote that after the switch there was “plenty of food, which every man by his own industry may easily and doth procure.” He said that when the socialist system had prevailed, “we reaped not so much corn from the labors of thirty men as three men have done for themselves now.”

hornofplenty.jpg
 

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