Warren Buffett has been running Berkshire Hathaway for nearly 60 years, moving capital around and delivering deadpan commentary that investors parse like economic scripture. Now, as he prepares to step back from daily leadership after decades in charge, he's made it clear he's not exactly disappearing. Earlier this month he said he plans to "go quiet," but he'll keep writing his annual Thanksgiving letter. For someone who values substance over spectacle, that tracks perfectly.
With Thanksgiving around the corner, one of his sharpest lines has come back into focus, reminding everyone just how close America came to a very different kind of holiday dinner.
The McDonald's Thanksgiving Nobody Talks About
Back in 2010, during a CNBC interview reflecting on the financial crisis, Buffett dropped this gem: "That week around Lehman, if government hadn't acted then I'd be having my Thanksgiving dinner at McDonald's instead of a big turkey dinner at my daughter's." It was delivered as a joke, naturally. But the underlying point was deadly serious.
He was talking about the most dangerous financial meltdown in modern U.S. history. When Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008, it triggered a chain reaction that moved faster than anyone thought possible. Liquidity evaporated almost overnight. Commercial banks were wobbling. AIG, the world's biggest insurer at the time, was at death's door. Hundreds of America's largest corporations relied on short-term financing that suddenly didn't exist anymore. Some were only weeks away from running out of cash entirely. The U.S. financial system wasn't just stressed—it was buckling.
Buffett's Thank You Note to Uncle Sam
Two years later, Buffett tried to capture the scale of what happened in his "Dear Uncle Sam" letter published in The New York Times. He opened with characteristic understatement: "My mother told me to send thank-you notes promptly. I've been remiss."
What followed was one of the clearest firsthand accounts of the crisis from someone who had a front-row seat to the chaos. He wrote that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had been pushed into conservatorship, several major commercial banks were on the brink, a giant Wall Street investment bank had already fallen, and AIG was collapsing. Many large industrial companies, unable to tap commercial paper markets that had completely evaporated, were weeks from exhausting their cash reserves.
His description was blunt: "All of corporate America's dominoes were lined up, ready to topple at lightning speed." He added that Berkshire Hathaway "might have been the last to fall," but that offered zero comfort. And it wasn't just corporate America in danger. "300 million Americans were in the domino line as well," he wrote, noting that jobs, income, 401(k)s, and money-market funds that seemed rock-solid days earlier had turned fragile overnight. "A destructive economic force unlike any seen for generations had been unleashed," and nobody was going to escape it.
Why Only Washington Could Stop the Collapse
Buffett made one thing crystal clear: only the federal government had the power to slow the collapse. He acknowledged its flaws—"Often you are wasteful, and sometimes you are bullying. On occasion you are downright maddening"—but in those days, speed mattered more than perfection. The government stepped in, deployed emergency measures, restored liquidity, and stabilized markets before the dominoes could fall.
His CNBC remarks echoed that same reality. The U.S. economy was still dealing with slow growth and high unemployment in 2010, but he said the outcome would have been catastrophically worse without swift intervention. Quantitative easing, deficits, tax debates—those were ongoing issues. The urgent point was that policymakers had acted when hesitation would have been disastrous.
The Joke That Explains Everything
That's what gives his Thanksgiving line its punch. It wasn't dramatic or flowery. It was Buffett's way of reminding Americans that the economy everyone relies on runs on confidence, speed, and decisions made in moments most people never see. If Washington had frozen during the darkest week of 2008, he believed the damage would have reached every household in the country—including his own.
Fifteen years later, with Buffett preparing to hand off leadership but still weighing in with the dry humor that made him a folk hero of finance, the message sits comfortably alongside the turkey and stuffing. The system holds only when someone steps in at the right time. And as he saw it, the right time was that week around Lehman—when a McDonald's Thanksgiving was closer than anyone realized.