This is a reasonable place to work on Thanksgiving. Walmart and Target are not.
If you're lucky enough to be sitting down to a big Thanksgiving meal with your loved ones today, spare a thought not just for those who can't afford the meal, but for those who are forced to skip it to work. Some are necessary—hospitals need to be staffed every day, for instance. But so many are not. Remember that workers arrive well before the stores open; they didn't pull up to the store that's opening as you finish your meal just ahead of you.
And remember that while few of the workers will speak out publicly, with their names attached for their bosses to see, many don't want to be there. We see it in the online petitions that workers have started or signed. And we see it in the much smaller number of workers who make themselves targets for retaliation by walking out or saying no. The Pizza Hut manager who has reportedly been offered his job back after being fired for refusing to open on Thanksgiving. The Chicago Whole Foods workers who went on strike on Wednesday to protest having to work on Thanksgiving—prompting corporate headquarters to claim they should have been told working Thanksgiving was voluntary all along. (That's pretty much the opposite of what they'd been told.)
And, of course, the Walmart workers, who have held strikes in a dozen cities across the country over the past month, and whom you can support by joining one of 1,500 Black Friday protests across the country.
Whatever Thanksgiving means to you, it shouldn't be a symbol of the race to the bottom.