Welll. . .I don't really care for the holiday myself, but that's because of personal reasons.
And, really, when you think about it, the Puritans were, in general, jerks. Let's face it, they were intolerant bigots who mandated church attendance and ran all the scary religious dissenters out of town or hung 'em. This is why the Baptist church first took hold in Rhode Island and not Massachusetts, after all. (God Bless Roger Williams!)
But at least they were pretty much jerks to everyone, Baptists, Quakers and Indians. After all, the Puritan argument that the natives were warlike savages can be shown to be decidedly untrue; the settlers of Acadia faced a native people who were culturally very similar to the Indians of Massachusetts and they had good relations with them until they were run off their land by the English (and then used as slaves by the good people of Massachusetts).
In general, I can say that the Puritans did invent bayberry candles and I like those, but other than that, I don't really see much to praise in the Purtains. My mom has a Mayflower and an Ann ancestor or two or three (just like a lot of people) and the more I research that period and those folks. . .I find the individuals interesting and compelling, but the body politick at large, not so much.
So the event we're supposed to be celebrating on Thanksgiving. . .well. Really. It isn't really. . .well. Celebrate-worthy. I mean, think about it. Take Easter. Easter celebrates the most important event on the Christian calendar. That's Celebrate-worthy. Or take the 4th of July, most of us can really get behind that celebration. . .but memorializing a feast held by a bunch of bigots who tried to kill themselves off through mild incompetency (after all, while they were incompetent, they were nowhere near the scale of say, Jamestown)?
Ah. Yeah.
And with that, I think I'll just keep my mouth shut and eat my turkey.