Editorial: Thanksgiving — a day to remember not everyone has a bounty to be thankful for
“The Pilgrims made seven times more graves than huts. No Americans have been more impoverished than these who, nevertheless, set aside a day of thanksgiving.”
— H.U. Westermayer
Most people will gather this Thanksgiving Day with family and friends to celebrate this iconic American holiday. We will do so with tables full of food that becomes refrigerators overflowing with leftovers.
And as we do so, plenty of our neighbors are struggling to find something to be thankful for – either because they are alone on this holiday that screams to be with others or because the bounty before them is anything but that.
With South Lake Tahoe’s unemployment rate of 12.3 percent being higher than California’s (10.1 percent), higher than Nevada’s (11.5 percent) and higher than the national average (7.9 percent), we are a community overflowing with have nots. And while South Tahoe once had an unemployment rate at nearly 18 percent, the decline of more than five percentage points does mean full employment. It means some have left the area, some have stopped looking for work, some are working multiple jobs, and so many are underemployed.
Many don’t know where the rent or mortgage payment will come from in a week.
While we live in an extremely pretty place, the beauty of the mountains and the lake don’t pay the bills. They are good for providing solace in times of struggle, but not much else.
Maybe there is something we can learn from the pilgrims who in 1621 celebrated what is considered the first Thanksgiving. They did so with the Wampanoag Indians. It was a time to be grateful for the fall harvest – for what the land had provided.
Perhaps locally, we should be thankful for our harvest this time of year – the snow. While the white stuff itself does not provide nourishment to be shared at a table, it provides work for so many who call Lake Tahoe home. And work provides the money to buy the fixings for every meal.
We don’t all work in the field of tourism, but we all ride the roller coaster of economic good and bad times because tourism is the thread that binds us.
The fabric of this community is thread barren. Instead of picking at the loose ends and watching them unravel into an abyss, perhaps it’s time we started to stitch the pieces back together.
The anger, the hate, the divisiveness in the world permeate our little town, our shores, the region. We need to stop beating each other up and start lifting each other up. It is time to be thankful that we have the ability to help and thankful for the help that is offered.
Thanksgiving – it’s really two words – thanks and giving.
Thank you for a most eloquent editorial. I was particularly impressed with the following excerpt:
“The anger, the hate, the divisiveness in the world permeates our little town, our shores, the region. We need to stop beating each other up and start lifting each other up.”
A truer statement was never made. Perhaps we need to place a little more emphasis, focus and pride on our successes and matters of agreement as a place from which to build so that the necessary compromises to our differences can be better affected with less acrimony and so workable solutions can be identified. As a community, region, and nation we really do need to stop beating each other up and start lifting each other up.
yup
I second that 4-mer. A very sensitive but sobering editorial that tells it like it is yet suggests a way forward. At this crucial time in our history, cooperation and collaboration need to be our guiding principles. We’ve all seen where derision and divisiveness get us……..nowhere…..gridlock….stuck in a rut.
South Lake Tahoe and the entire Tahoe Basin and surrounding region are uniquely positioned to become a national–if not international–model of how to find consensus behind plans to lift us out of our social, economic, and environmental malaise.
Please consider this: Visualize a map with Lake Tahoe as its’ center point. Extend a circle out from that center point 100 miles in all directions. That would encompass a region with incredibly diverse assets. To the east we have the Nevada desert region with it’s abundance of sun, wind and geothermal resources capable of providing clean, renewable energy and growing food in greenhouses. To the west we have some of the most productive soil in the nation, more sunshine and a large population that makes up a significant percentage of our visitor base. North and south are the mountains, rivers, lakes and meadows that invite people from around the globe to recreate and find some peace and serenity from their hectic day-to-day.
Now imagine the two state capitals that fall within that circle working cooperatively (I know this is a stretch) with local jurisdictions to to develop and maximize these assets and create a region that is growing it’s own food and producing it’s own energy locally in a sustainable way. Do you think a model like that would be inspiring and draw many visitors to our newly redeveloped communities to experience sustainability in action?
That’s my hope and dream for our region. It would take a tremendous amount of work and cooperation…but it is doable if the social and political will are there. If you have some ideas on how to reinvent our town, our basin, our region—please share them at:
transformingtahoe.blogspot.com
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Thank you, Kae. My Mom taught us to help others, that there is always someone going through a worse time than you, and to be thankful for family and friends.