By The USNN World News Team
A tribute to Rush H, Limbaugh III, Radio’s Greatest of All Time. Thank you Rush for your contributions to humanity.
RUSH: So, my second book was See, I Told You So. The first book is The Way Things Ought to Be and the second book is See, I Told You So. âChapter 6, Dead White Guys, or What the History Books Never Told You: The True Story of Thanksgiving.â

Now, normally what I do is simply read from my first book. But there has now been another book added in the Rush Revere series, and the first Rush Revere book is Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims. These are childrenâs books that were written to help young people get the true stories of Americaâs founding because so little of it is actually correctly taught.
In the childrenâs book version, Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims, I went into a little bit more detail about the Indians, the Native Americans who helped the arriving Pilgrims and what that story actually is and how the True Story of Thanksgiving has been obscured by what is taught â what I was taught, you were probably taught. Hereâs the version you were probably taught:
The Pilgrims arrived here after an arduous trip across the Atlantic Ocean. They didnât know why they were, had no idea what to do. They had nothing. The Indians took pity on them. The Indians saw them, and the Indians saved them. The Indians taught âem how to do things they didnât know how to do, like grow food, catch beavers, stuff like that.
The Indians saved them, and the Pilgrims thanked them by growing a whole bunch of food and having this big feast. So, the story of Thanksgiving thatâs taught is basically how without the Native Americans there wouldnât be a country because the Pilgrims would have died. At least the Pilgrims were nice enough to pay the Indians back with a big Thanksgiving dinner.

Thatâs not at all what happened. Itâs not even close to what happened, which is why I decided to write about it. Now, in the Revere book â the childrenâs book, as I say â I went into greater detail about some of the Native Americans who provided assistance to the arriving Pilgrims, particularly a young native by the name of Squanto.
Now, Iâm doing show prep today, and I come across a story in The Federalist. I quote from this website all the time, and Iâm reading this story here, and, by the way, folks, it is⌠(chuckles) I donât know. Itâs right out of the Rush Revere book, and itâs right out of my See, I Told You So book. Thereâs a whole lot of discussion here of Squanto, who he was, what he did, how he helped, the details.
The point is The True Story of Thanksgiving is spreading, and I couldnât be happier about that. Bottom line: It is spreading. Iâm just gonna cut to the chase here before getting into reading the text. The Real Story of Thanksgiving, going back to the very first early days of the Pilgrims arriving at Plymouth Rock, is that socialism failed.
This is crucially important today, because we have just elected a Democrat Party that is going to implement socialism if they win these two seats in Georgia, and theyâre gonna try regardless. But if they win those two seats in Georgia, you can say good-bye to the United States as you know it. It will become a socialist state. It will begin the process of becomingâŚ
Well, weâre way down the road towards it anyway. So, it is crucially important here for people to understand this. Itâs not antiquated. Itâs not a cliche. Itâs not something that you can make fun of people about. You know, it used to be when I first started this show in the late eighties, early nineties, if you dared to refer to the Soviet Union as âcommunist,â people made fun of you.
âAh, come on, Rush! You see a communist behind every rock,â and they tried to ridicule you out of identifying communists and communism. Castro, the ChiComs. I never buckled, but a lot of people did â and theyâre doing it now. If you say, âThe United States, the Democrat Partyâs on the pathway to socialism,â they make fun of you. They mock you.
âCome on! You donât believe that. You canât believe that! Thatâs just silly,â and they try to mock you and make fun of you, to silence you. But, folks, itâs real. Now⌠âThe story of the Pilgrims begins in the early part of the seventeenth century⌠The Church of England under King James I was persecuting anyone and everyone who did not recognize [the churchâs] absolute civil and spiritual authority,â actually, the state.
âThose who challenged ecclesiastical authority and those who believed strongly in freedom of worship were hunted downâŚâ This is in England in the 1600s. They âwere hunted down and imprisoned, and sometimes executed for their beliefs. A group of separatists,â people who didnât want any part of this, âfirst fled to Holland,â they liked wooden shoes and cheese, âand established a community.â
They were there for eleven years. âAfter eleven years, about forty ofâ these separatists who liked wooden shoes and cheese, âagreed to make a perilous journey to the New WorldâŚâ They had heard about it. Some new, exciting place that hadnât been developed. They knew they would âface hardships,â hardships like you and I donât know â and Iâm not preaching to you.
Iâm just telling you, we donât know the hardship these people endured. We canât. We are way too advanced now. People who lived in the 1600s would not believe life today. (Snort!) Try to explain flight, jet travel. They wouldnât understand it. They knew they would âface hardships,â but paramount importance to them was living freely and worshiping God according to the dictates of their own consciences, their own beliefs.
Thatâs what they were denied the freedom to do in England. âOn August 1, 1620, the Mayflower set sail. It carried a total of 102 passengers, including fortyâ of these separatists, the Pilgrims. There were just 40 of them. They were âled by William Bradford. On the journeyâ across the Atlantic⌠You talk about something that had to be frightening and scary?

The Mayflower was not much bigger than a 50-foot boat, and 102 people on it. âOn the journey, Bradford set up an agreement, a contractâ if you will, âthat established just and equal laws for all [40] members of the [Pilgrim] community, irrespective of their religious beliefs.â It didnât matter what their religious beliefs were.
These are the laws they were all agreeing to live by. âWhere did the revolutionary ideas,â these laws, come from? Weâre talking about the Mayflower Compact. That is what Bradford wrote. The Mayflower Compact derived â[f]rom the Bible. The Pilgrims were a people completely steeped in the lessons of the Old and New Testaments.â
They were devoutly religious people. No matter what else is said about them (and even that is denied), they were devoutly religious. âThey looked to the ancient Israelites for their example. And, because of the biblical precedents set forth in Scripture, they never doubted that their experiment would work.â
They never doubted they would get to the New World. They never doubted that once they got there, they would thrive. The journey was long; it was arduous; it was dangerous. And when they finally landed, when the Pilgrims finally landed in New England in November, according to William Bradfordâs detailed journal, they found a cold, barren, desolate wilderness. Imagine New England as it exists today as nothing but rocks, forest, undeveloped nature in November and getting colder.
There were no friends to greet them. There was no shelter of any kind other than hiding under a tree, there was nothing, folks. It was desolate. There were no hotels. There were no inns. There were no places to clean up. There were no houses. I mean, this was real hardship. The sacrifice that they had made for the freedom to worship was just beginning.
During that first winter â remember, they arrive in November â during that first winter, half of them, including William Bradfordâs own wife, died of starvation, of sickness, exposure to the elements. Now weâre getting close to what you were taught in school. When spring finally came â and, by the way, writing that doesnât do it justice. Spring didnât just finally come. It was a survival. It was an act of survival that you and I cannot possibly relate to or understand.
American Special Forces can. Military people whoâve been trained can understand what the Pilgrims were â you and I canât. Weâve never done anything like that first winter in the New World. They survived it. Spring finally came. They did meet the Indians, the Native Americans who were there, who did help them in planting corn and fishing for cod. They showed âem where the beavers were so the beavers could be skinned for coats, other things. You animal rights people are not gonna like some of this story, but it happened.
But even at this, even with this degree of assistance from the Indians, the Native Americans, there wasnât any prosperity yet. They had the Mayflower Compact. They had these laws they were living by, and there was no prosperity. And I wonder why. Now, this is important to understand here, folks, because this is where modern American history lessons end, with the Indians teaching the Pilgrims how to eat, how to fish, how to skin beavers, and all that.
Thatâs where it ends. And thatâs the feel-good story. But that doesnât even get close to the true story. You know, Thanksgiving is actually explained in some textbooks as a holiday for which the Pilgrims gave thanks to the Indians for saving their lives. It wasnât that. That happened, but Thanksgiving was a devout expression of gratitude, the Pilgrims, to God for their survival, and everything that was a part of it.
Now, hereâs the part that has been omitted. The original contract the Pilgrims entered into in Holland â they had sponsors. They didnât have the money to do this trip on their own. They had sponsors. There were merchant sponsors in London and in Holland. And these merchant sponsors demanded that everything that the Pilgrims produced in the New World would go into a common store, a single bank, if you will. And that each member of the Pilgrim community was entitled to one share.

So everybody had an equal share of whatever was in that bank. All of the land they cleared, all of the houses they built belonged to that bank, to the community as well. And they were going to distribute it equally, because they were gonna be fair. So all of the land that they cleared and all the houses they built belonged to everybody. Belonged to the community. Belonged to the bank, belonged to the common store. Nobody owned anything. They just had an equal share in it. It was a commune.
The Pilgrims established a commune, essentially. Forerunner of the communes we saw in the sixties and seventies out in California. They even had their own organic vegetables, by the way. Yep. The Pilgrims, forerunners of organic vegetables. Of course, what else could there be? No such thing as processed anything back then.
Now, William Bradford, who had become the governor of the colony âcause he was the leader, recognized that this wasnât gonna work. This was costly and destructive, and it just wasnât working. It was collectivism. It was socialism. It wasnât working. That first winner had taken a lot of lives. The manpower was greatly reduced. So William Bradford decided to take bold action, which I will describe when we get back.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: William Bradford, the governor of the Pilgrim community, saw that none of this was working. The Mayflower Compact was not working. Giving everybody a single share of stock in the common store, in the common bank was not working. Collectivism. It was as costly and destructive to the Pilgrims as it is and has been to anybody who has ever tried it.
So Bradford decided to scrub it. He threw it out and took bold action. He assigned a plot of land to each family. Every family was given a plot of land. They could work it, manage it however they wanted to. If they just wanted to sit on it, get fat, dumb, happy, and lazy, they could. If they wanted to develop it, if they wanted to grow corn, whatever on it, they could. If they wanted to build on it, they could do that. If they wanted to turn it into a quasi-business, they could do whatever they wanted to do with it.
He turned loose the power of the capitalist marketplace. Long before Karl Marx was even born. Long before Karl Marx was a sperm cell in his fatherâs dreams, the Pilgrims had discovered and experimented with what could only be described as socialism, and they found that it didnât work. Now, it wasnât called that then. But thatâs exactly what it was. Everybody was given an equal share. You know what happened? Nobody did anything. There was no incentive. Nothing worked. Nothing happened.
âWhat Bradford and his community found was that the most creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any harder than anyone else, unless they could utilize the power of personal motivation! But while most of the rest of the world has been experimenting with socialism for well over a hundred years â trying to refine it, perfect it, and re-invent it â the Pilgrims decided early on to scrap it permanently. What Bradford wrote about this social experiment should be in every schoolchildâs history lesson. If it were, we might prevent much needless suffering,â if the true story of Thanksgiving had been taught for years and years and years.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: So, William Bradford, after putting everybody in a common store, the Mayflower Compact⌠They wanted to be fair. They wanted everybody to have one common share of stock in everything that happened that the Pilgrims produced â and it bombed. It didnât work.
There was no prosperity; there was no creativity because there was no incentive. Hereâs what Bradford wrote about the failure: ââFor this community [so far as it was] was found to breed much confusion and discontentâŚââ They were not happy, in other words. ââThis community was found to breed much confusion and discontent and retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort.ââ
In other words, nobody worked.
The way they set it up, killed and discouraged work.
There was no need.
ââFor young men that were most able and fit for labor and serviceââ sat around and did nothing. ââThey should spend their time and strength to work for other menâs wives and children withoutââ being paid for it? Why should they do that? So, they didnât. ââThat was thought injustice.â Why should you work for other people when you canât work for yourself? Whatâs the point? Do you hear what he was saying, ladies and gentlemen?
âThe Pilgrims found that people could not be expected to do their best work without incentive. So, what did Bradfordâs community try next? They unharnessed the power of good old free enterprise by invokingâ capitalism, âthe principle of private property,â all the way back in the 1600s. It was incredible. âEvery family was assigned its own plot of land,â and they could do with it whatever they wanted to do.
ââThis had very good success,â wrote Bradford, âfor it made all hands industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been.ââ So when profit was introduced, when the opportunity to prosper was introduced, it went gangbusters. That, my friends, is the essence of the True Story of Thanksgiving. âNow, this is where it gets really good, folks, if youâre laboring under the misconception that I was, as I was taught in school.

âSo they set up trading posts and exchanged goods with the Indiansâ after they had enjoyed this prosperity. It was not the Indians that brought them to prosperity. Itâs not said to insult anybody. The Indians assisted in their arrival undeniably. But what led to prosperity for these original settlers was the common store failed. Socialism didnât work.
Itâs when they introduced what turns out to be capitalism. They didnât have the name for it, but when they turned loose individual incentive â keep what you produce, sell what you donât need â it went crazy. This is not something they were taught by anybody by self-experience. It was not the Indians. None of this is said to put anybody down. Donât misunderstand.
The Indians did a lot of things that helped them, which Iâll get to in just a second, but it was their own industriousness. âThey set up trading posts and exchanged goods with the Indians.â They sold stuff to them, and those âprofits allowed them to pay off their debts to the merchants,â their sponsors in London and in Holland, and you know what?
The success of that colony after they had abandoned socialism and tried what was essentially capitalism, the word spread throughout the Old World of this massive amount of prosperity that was there for the taking in the New World. And guess what happened? The New World was flooded with new arrivals. âThe success and prosperity of the Plymouth settlement attracted more Europeans and began what came to be known as the âGreat Puritan Migration.ââ
And all it took was prosperity and the word spreading across the Atlantic Ocean of how there was prosperity and it was there for the taking. All you had to do was get there and give it a shot. The lesson is â The True Story of Thanksgiving is â that William Bradford and his Pilgrim community were thanking God for the blessings on their community after the first miserable winter of a documented failure brought on by their attempt at fairness and equality, which was socialism.
It didnât work.
Only when they abandoned it did it work â and I need to say it again, because I donât want people to misunderstand and get noses out of joint. The Native Americans, the indigenous people, the Injuns, whatever you want to call âem, they were of considerable assistance, and they were friendly when the Pilgrims arrived. But they had little, if anything, to do with the prosperity that occurred.
Because that was the result of Bradford and the Pilgrim leadership deciding to change their structure, the Mayflower Compact. Now, Indians assisted, naturally. I canât deny it. I mean, they taught them how to fish and this kind of thing that they didnât know how to do, and that led them to be productive, undeniably so. But it was the Pilgrim community itself which experienced this massive prosperity.
The word of which spread all the way back to the Old World, Europe across the Atlantic Ocean.
Now, I mentioned earlier that The Federalist has a story on all this, and in it they describe much of what we did in the second book that dealt with this, the childrenâs book, Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims. That book goes into great detail about how the Indians did provide assistance and what kind of assistance it was, how valuable it was and how crucial it was.

In Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims, we focus on a Native American by the name of Squanto. Now, as I told you, âDuring the winter of 1620, only 44 out of the original 102 Pilgrims survived, including their first elected governor of the colony, John Carver,â and it was âan Indian named Squanto came to their rescue.â As I say, this is, as I say, explored in great detail in Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims.
âSquanto was no ordinary native. Early settlers in 1610 had captured him and sold him into slavery. A group of Catholic friars freed him and brought him to England, where he learned to speak English. In 1618, serving as an interpreter on an English ship, he was brought back to the New World.â It was Squanto â who is a famous Native American in his own right in the Pilgrim story. it was Squanto who âtaught the Pilgrims how to plant and fish,â how to skin beavers. It was Squanto who âbrokered a peace treaty between the Pilgrims and other Indian tribes.â
There was more than one tribe of Indians. It was not copacetic. It was not friendly and at one with nature. It was not anything like the multiculturalists would have you believe. There were squabbles; there were power struggles; turf battles. It was human. The Indians, the Pilgrims, everybody was scrambling for power, for survival. Survivability was the name of the game. And it was not guaranteed.
Now, many of the Pilgrims literally believed that God had sent Squanto to save them. And they believed, the Pilgrims believed, that without Squanto they never would have survived, or thrived. And they experienced a tremendous harvest in 1621, and thatâs the big gathering that is taught in the history books, the native Indians and the Pilgrims joined together for a huge feast, which is the foundational story of the Thanksgiving story thatâs taught in public schools.
But, again, that is not The Real Story of Thanksgiving. Thatâs the textbook brand. It did happen, but itâs so much more than that. And I love taking the opportunity every year to explain the truth of, especially now given this electionâs apparently, allegedly fallen out. Because even at The Federalist â this is so great that the story is spreading. âOne of the most important legacies of early settlers is that they experimented with socialism in the 1620s, and it didnât work. Private property rights and personal responsibility, two pillars of a free market economy, saved the Plymouth colony from extinction and laid the economic foundation for a free and prosperous nation that we all enjoy today.â
And that is exactly right. And that is The True Story of Thanksgiving. And that has been what should have been shared with you every Thanksgiving for the past 31 years.
AMERICAâS ANCHORMAN – RUSH H. LIMBAUGH
Rush Hudson Limbaugh III, Radioâs Greatest of All Time and Americaâs Anchorman, revolutionized the media industry with his unprecedented on-air political analysis and sharp satirical humor. After years working as a Top 40 disc jockey and a stint with the Kansas City Royals, he launched The Rush Limbaugh Show out of Sacramento in 1988. His influence spread rapidly as word of his unique take on current events reached the nation. He was featured on news programs and late night talk shows, began the Rush to Excellence Tour, and started his own television show. Radio syndication grew from 56 to an unheard-of 600 stations, with over 30 million weekly listeners.
In recognition of his national influence, Rush was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians, the Radio Hall of Fame, the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame and received five Marconi Radio Awards. He was also widely esteemed as an adult and childrenâs author, including seven #1 New York Times bestselling books and as a recipient of the Childrenâs Choice Author of the Year Award. In 2020, Rush was presented with the highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, by President Donald J. Trump. Rush Limbaugh leaves a lasting legacy of excellence, determination and patriotism.