Keith, I was surprised at the numbers in the poll (59% and 68%). I can’t
help but wonder if there isn’t more than tribal comfort levels involved and
the interplay of cultural identity. I wonder about the burden of size, as
you suggested, but also about the tendency of older nations to resent having
too many dependents still hanging around, like older people if they are not
allowed to rest and let the next generation take up the family burden. In
this case, a tax burden strained by social services with too many new
members in a limited land space.

You know, we are just ending a holiday weekend over here that superficially
is a celebration of history and time to be grateful for blessings, the
Hallmark version. Another aspect is how far individuals are willing
(forced?) to travel to be with their family members at least once a year,
like an annual pilgrimage to a mecca of food consumption and rebonding with
family members.

These simple holiday reenactments are now being supplanted by Wall
Street-inspired acts of feasting and spending, much as feasts in the early
centuries did for weeks at a time, and in some cultures, culminated in a
live sacrifice. Many find mates or leave theirs in this pilgrimage,
reinforcing again that we are not so different from other migrating animals.

Thanks to the retailization of America, Thanksgiving, the third Thursday in
November, now kicks off the holiday season of parties, food and gifts
culminating in the New Year. Thanks to a moderate climate and modern
transportation, relative wealth and comfort, we hold these annual feasts for
six weeks. No wonder there is a post-holiday adjustment of fatigue and spent
resources, a resentment by those who can’t participate and the displaced.

Arthur commented from an item in the Casey Reports, how interesting it is
that the purchase of take-out holiday food is rising, and my thoughts after
more than a decade of preparing meals and cleaning afterwards for my local
family that now with boyfriends and girlfriends varies from 14-20 is that I
could handle a year or two of that. Not everyone is a “foodie”. But as long
as the younger ones bring something and do the clean up afterwards, the
tradition will survive.

Wouldn’t this ICM poll in Great Britain indicate that citizens feel
relatively safe and don’t need the burden of forged alliances to survive, as
they felt before? In the face of the global war on terrorism, one assumes
that the English, Scots and Welsh would still share the British Army and
Navy. And tea.

Maybe I’m just a middle aged grump today, tired from deboning two turkeys,
freezing the extra meat and making broth, caring for my elderly, ill,
parents and my young grandson. A fish taco for lunch sounds wonderful but
more likely it will be a shepherd’s pie to make use of the leftover mashed
potatoes. Or more likely, I can’t imagine cultural differences here in the
States progressing from the wish stage of a poll to actual regional
settlements because our American history is less of a simmering melting pot
and more like a blender, tribes and groups arriving at different times in
various amounts, blended and tossed across an expansive landscape, each
batch a different result.

The British experience reflects its island geography, as does Japan’s. By
comparison, the North American experience is still in mid-development. But
now that the US population is 300 million, I am wondering if our Canadian
neighbors are less comfortable about that long, open border we share. And
that’s the point where the history of Europe and the emerging history of
North America gets interesting in this technologically-open borders global
economy.

Bon apetit.





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