I LOVE writing my annual Thanksgiving column. As an American living in the 21st century, there is an overwhelming amount to be thankful for.
Global poverty is in a rapid decline. Within the last generation, the persistence of people living a subsistence existence has declined from 40 percent to 10 percent. This is the greatest period of economic advance in the history of man. And we’re just getting started.
In almost every area, the world is progressing. This progress can be stressful as change always is, but the end result will be higher standards of living for us all. That’s a good thing.
This reality is apparent in our day-to-day lives in just about everything we do. Think about the human quest of knowledge. Today a smartphone, properly used, can give an average American instant access to all the combined knowledge of the world – literally, in the palm of our hands.
Thirty years ago, such a device would have cost a billion dollars. Indeed, we are all billionaires.
Look at something as basic as the light bulb. Two years ago, I replaced all my incandescent light bulbs with LED bulbs. I haven’t changed a light bulb since. It now costs me $50 to light my house for a year – one tenth the cost from before.
People worry about global warming, but last year the world installed twice as much wind and solar power as fossil fuels. At that rate, the world could replace fossil fuels in 35 years, including gasoline and diesel.
In reality, the rate of wind and solar growth won’t stay the same. It will skyrocket. New storage technologies will emerge, leading to a world of extremely low cost energy that will have little effect on global warming. So let’s quit being Chicken Littles.
Seems it was just a few years ago, everyone was alarmed about deforestation. Unfortunately for the pine tree farmers, Mississippi has more forests than ever before. We have a huge abundance of wood to build the world’s houses.
Just walk into a grocery store. You can buy just about every type of food you can imagine. That’s if you need to buy groceries. There are hundreds of restaurants in Jackson serving every kind of cuisine imaginable at affordable prices. We have an abundance of everything in America and the rest of the world is not far behind.
Entertainment? Netflix and streaming video provide us with more sports, movies and shows than we could watch in a 100 lifetimes. The resolution of the new televisions is almost lifelike with 4K, yet 4K will be obsolete in a few years. The screens will be better than your eyes can tell.
Travel? We have more jets, hotels, cruise lines, resorts than ever. Soon, you won’t even have to get on a plane. You can put on virtual reality goggles and walk through the streets of Paris as though you were there.
Recreation? Goodness gracious the options are unlimited: biking, swimming, tennis, golf, running, walking, weightlifting, motorbiking, horses, hunting, fishing, spectator sports.
Health? People know more about health care than ever. For one thing, the Internet can provide instant access to information about all kinds of ailments. Hospitals and specialty clinics can treat an almost unlimited number of diseases. There is a pill for everything. The biggest impediment to our health is our own bad lifestyle decisions. We are on the verge of breaking the code on cancer.
Best of all, in Mississippi we have more churches per capita than anywhere in the world. Our material abundance pales in comparison to our spiritual abundance. We have thousands of pastors and Sunday School teachers who understand God’s word and will joyfully teach us about the Holy Spirit. That’s one of the great ironies about our material abundance, with the Holy Spirit, we don’t even need it.
So don’t get sucked into the national news cycle, which is designed to focus on the negative and the scary. Yes, there is still sin and evil in the world. This is part of the human condition.
But on Thanksgiving 2018, we have more to be thankful for than our Pilgrim ancestors could ever have imagined.