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“A day of thanksgiving kept in all the churches for our victories against the Pequots.” — John Winthrop
In this powerful second episode, we breathe, check in, and then peel back one of America’s most enduring myths: Thanksgiving.
Far from the grade-school story of friendship and feasting, the 1621 harvest gathering was a political alliance born out of crisis, a survival strategy for both the English colonizers and the Wampanoag Nation after the Great Dying (1616–1619) had already wiped out up to 90% of Indigenous peoples along the coast. We revisit what the feast actually looked like, who was present, and why no one at the time even called it “Thanksgiving.”
From there, we confront the truth:
Today, that myth still functions as a form of national amnesia.
In this episode, we ask:
Join us as we replace nostalgia with honesty and trace how Thanksgiving became less about gratitude, and more about making genocide look like destiny.
By Ernest Crim III“A day of thanksgiving kept in all the churches for our victories against the Pequots.” — John Winthrop
In this powerful second episode, we breathe, check in, and then peel back one of America’s most enduring myths: Thanksgiving.
Far from the grade-school story of friendship and feasting, the 1621 harvest gathering was a political alliance born out of crisis, a survival strategy for both the English colonizers and the Wampanoag Nation after the Great Dying (1616–1619) had already wiped out up to 90% of Indigenous peoples along the coast. We revisit what the feast actually looked like, who was present, and why no one at the time even called it “Thanksgiving.”
From there, we confront the truth:
Today, that myth still functions as a form of national amnesia.
In this episode, we ask:
Join us as we replace nostalgia with honesty and trace how Thanksgiving became less about gratitude, and more about making genocide look like destiny.