Happy Thanksgiving

This is a blog I wrote for Thanksgiving for my law practice.  I also add a few additional personal notes below it.  Have a wonderful weekend.  Despite all the difficult news out there, we still do have a lot for which to be thankful!

      “As False Claims Act lawyers and lovers of history, we have a certain reverence for Abraham Lincoln, the President given principal credit for conceiving of the need for a whistleblower statute to help stem the tide of contractor fraud during the Civil War. 

     There are of course many other reasons to admire President Lincoln, the author of some of the most aspirational and inspiring expressions of American political thought, such as the Gettysburg Address and the Second Inaugural Address, and most impactful decisions, such as the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation and applying pressure on Congress to pass the Thirteenth Amendment (abolishing slavery) before the end of the war, against long odds. 

          Lincoln is less well known for his role in establishing, on a national basis, the Thanksgiving holiday, that most uniquely American of holidays.  He did so in October, 1863, in the darkest months of the prolonged American Civil War. 

          Thanksgiving had been observed more casually prior to that time, and with considerable variation by region.  Colonial settlers here in Massachusetts are credited with celebrating the first thanksgiving celebration in the “New World” in 1621, and George Washington proclaimed a day of Thanksgiving on November 26, 1789 just after the formation of the United States by the ratification of the Constitution. 

          But in terms of making it a national day of celebration, applicable to all Americans, “in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea, and those who are sojourning in foreign lands,” Lincoln gets the full credit for urging us to “set apart and observe the last Thursday of November” expressly as a national day of gratitude and “humble penitence.” 

          It was, like so many of Lincoln’s writings and utterances, aspirational – this was, after all, the end of a third year of hideously brutal and inconclusive Civil War, with casualties mounting to unimaginable numbers, with no realistic end in sight and increasing calls for an end to the conflict even at the price of disunion.         

          He reminded us that despite all of the distractions of the armed conflict between our fellow citizens, there were still “blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies.”  In the ultimate expression of the-glass-is half-full, he said:  “In the midst of a civil war of unequalled magnitude and severity…, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, the laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere except in the theater of military conflict.”  So he deemed that it would be fitting and proper that these blessings should be “solemnly, reverently, and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and voice by the whole American people.”  His was a call for gratitude, humility, and unity. 

          We all observe Thanksgiving today in our own unique ways.  Some eat turkey and pies; some grill tofu.  Many of us suffer through highway traffic to be with loved ones.  But however we observe it, we all share, even in these challenging times, ties of the history that binds us together, and the gift of a government that still aspires, in its best days, to be “of the people, by the people, for the people.” 

          Here at the Whistleblower Law  Collaborative, we are enormously grateful for so many things:  for our courageous clients, for a free press and the right to speak truth to power, for the quiet and professional ways in which talented but unrecognized government lawyers and investigators do their jobs, for our colleagues in the whistleblower bar, and for idealists everywhere who want to make this world a more peaceful, more fair, and more just place.” 

Addendum:  On a personal note, let me mention a few of the things that I am grateful for, in addition to those above.

I am grateful for my wife Polly, her steadfastness and her commitment, her love and her beauty, her intelligence, and her mothering of two young women who are oh-so-much-more-unstoppable because of her.

I am grateful for Emma and Eliza, their candor, their humor, their intelligence, their guidance, their commitment to moving us all forward, their kindness to everyone and to me — even when I don’t deserve it.

I am grateful for mentors and educators, who made my success possible:  my father (the other Bobby Thomas), Reddy Finney, Fouad Ajami, Nick Littlefield, Chuck Ruff, Mark Lynch, Dale Kelberman, Bob Luskin, to name just a few who helped me along the way.  (Wouldn’t it be fun, in some imaginary setting, to get all these people in the same room?)

I am grateful to my Mother, who encouraged my sense of humor, and whose sweetness I feel every day.

I am grateful for my grandmothers, who tolerated my liberalism and saw big things in me.

I am grateful for my skinny-legged sisters, and how they can both love me and call me out in the same breath.

I am grateful for the way in which the Thomas family sticks together, and the Bruce family is finding each other.

I am grateful for medical science, which has saved my life more than once.

I am grateful for tennis, which supplies me endless amounts of diversion and challenge.

I am grateful for my Friday coffee buddies, who for fifteen steadfast years have met every week at 7:00 a.m. to listen to each other, to laugh a bit too loudly, to commiserate about fascism, and to help each other stay positive.

I am grateful for Hope Central Church, and the open and affirming way it welcomes all  of us, including “questioning believers” and non-believers alike, and for the inspiration and insight and community it provides.

I am grateful to the Universe, that somehow the molecules and chemicals that coalesced to form me actually happened, and that I get to witness the wonder and improbability of this time and this place, and to be in community with so many people and things that I love.

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

Author: Even We Here

Bob Thomas is a lawyer and teacher, a husband and father, and a lover of history, sports, humor, and the wonders of the physical world. He hopes to live long enough to see humanity make progress on the issues he cares most about.

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