Springfield News-Sun

Good people offer good reasons to give thanks

- Clarence Page Middletown native Clarence Page writes for the Chicago Tribune.

In a world boiling over with bad news, you can find it increasing­ly hard to pause and seriously ponder the value of giving thanks, even on the holiday created for that solemn purpose.

Yet, even in darkest times, we still have homegrown heroes who remind us how, at the very least, things could be worse.

Take, for example, the newsmaker who just in time for Thanksgivi­ng offers us the memorable self-deprecatin­g quote, “I’m not a hero. I’m just some dude.”

“Some dude,” indeed. That was Richard Fierro, 45, the retired Army major who helped save lives at the Nov. 19, mass shooting at Club Q, an LGBTQ bar in Colorado Springs, where he tackled the gunman who killed five people and injured at least 18 others.

In the club for a family outing, Fierro was credited by police with grabbing the gunman, tackling him as his Ar-15-style rifle fell to the floor. Fierro shouted for another patron to grab the rifle and ordered a drag dancer passing by to stomp the attacker while he grabbed the gunman’s handgun and pummeled him with it. Anderson Aldrich, 22, faces first-degree murder and committing a bias-motivated crime causing bodily injury.

Dictionari­es define “hero” as a person of distinguis­hed courage, who is admired for his or her brave deeds, noble qualities and sacrifices. After four combat deployment­s in Iraq and Afghanista­n, Fierro shied away from the H-word, a reluctance that, whether he likes it or not, only makes him sound more heroic. “I don’t know how I got the weapon away from that guy, no idea,” he told The New York Times. “I’m just a dude, I’m a fat old vet, but I knew I had to do something.”

After months of constant exposure to the hyperinfla­ted egos of self-regarding politician­s, it is sobering and refreshing to hear someone who faced danger, came out alive and doesn’t want to grab credit for everything that’s good in the world.

I feel thankful about Fierro and everyone else involved in saving lives that night for giving me something to feel thankful about, even if it is only to remember that something bad has happened that could have been so much worse.

Soon my spirits were further brightened by another burst of good news: The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies are back.

Who could forget the awful carnage a year ago when a driver plowed an SUV through a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin? Six people were killed, including four mem- bers of the Dancing Grannies, an elderly-but-spirituall­y-ageless group of women clad in red, white and blue, shaking pompoms and dancing in the streets since the 1980s.

The driver, Darrell Brooks, 40, was sentenced to life in prison on Nov. 16. “You know, maybe parades aren’t as safe as they used to be,” Betty Streng, 62, told a Milwaukee TV station. She survived a fractured skull and brain bleed. “But why would I not go back? Why would I limit my life because I’m afraid of something?”

Indeed, why should any of us limit ourselves out of fear of the past when we could be enjoying and appreciati­ng what we have left to pursue in the future?

We have faced numerous depressing threats, including election deniers, conspiracy theorists and others who have worked relentless­ly to undermine our faith in the very institutio­ns that we need to keep us safe, organized and working together to build a better future. That, to me, is what Thanksgivi­ng is about. We Americans traditiona­lly like to count our blessings and we still have a lot of blessings to count. Let’s appreciate what we have so we can have more to be thankful for in the future.

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

Paul Krugman Mary Sanchez Clarence Page Michelle Goldberg E. J. Dionne Jr.

Gail Collins Leonard Pitts

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