"Three Commencement Speeches"
Sydney M. Williams
June 4, 2014
Thought of the Day
“Three Commencement
Speeches”
June 4, 2014
Thousands
of graduation speeches have been held or will be held during ceremonies at the
nation’s 7000 colleges and universities this spring. Some have been inspiring,
while most are repetitions of trite sentiments and a few simply sleep-inducing.
Among
those thousands, three stand out (though I am sure there are dozens of others
that were equally memorable): the first, the President’s at West
Point . With his foreign policy approval ratings at 41%, Mr. Obama needed
to change perceptions, and define a legacy that has been mired in scandal and
ineffectiveness. The second was Michael Bloomberg’s address at Harvard, which
addressed a growing problem of the illiberal left – tolerance of intolerance.
The third was the speech delivered by Admiral William McRaven in Austin at the University
of Texas , an inspiring
talk based on his own experiences at basic SEAL training.
Mr.
Obama’s address at West Point “was,” according
to The New York Times, “largely uninspiring” and “lacked strategic
sweep.” The response from the cadets was muted. What the President did was to
set up straw men and then knock them down. The problem is that no one,
Republican or Democrat, had advocated the policies he suggested they had.
Reading the speech, it seemed that the spectre of George Bush hovered over the
podium. (Democracies are our closest friends and are far less likely to go to
war.”) Again, sounding like Mr. Bush, he said: “I believe that a world of
greater freedom and tolerance is not only a moral imperative; it also helps
keep us safe.” But, less anyone mistake him for his predecessor, he set up
straw men, adding that while we have an interest in pursuing peace and freedom
beyond our borders, “not…every problem has a military solution.” He said we
must restrain from “our willingness to rush into military adventures” and later
added, for the benefit of Mr. Obama’s phantasmal straw men, that “a strategy
that involves invading every country that harbors terrorist networks is naïve
and unsustainable.” Of course, no one, not even the despised Mr. Bush,
recommended such strategies.
The
speech was defensive; it explained why standing on the sidelines would characterize
his Administration: crises that “stir our conscience” or “push the world in a
more dangerous direction but do not directly
(my emphasis) threaten us, then the threshold for military action must be
higher.” “..We should not go it alone.” Mr. Obama did assert that the most
direct threat to America ,
at home and abroad, remains terrorism. Yet his only policy initiative was to
call on Congress to support a new counterterrorism partnership fund “of up to
$5 billion.” That represents .08% of current year’s defense budget. With it,
the President expects to “train, build capacity and facilitate partner
countries on the front lines,” countries that harbor those who pose America ’s greatest
threat – yet it will be done with less than one percent of the defense budget!
In
an attempt to undo the past, Mr. Obama stated: “I believe in American
exceptionalism with every fiber of my being.” I could almost see his lips
quiver with indignation, as he delivered that line. How far we have come from Strasbourg , France
in 2009: “I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect the Brits
believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek
exceptionalism.”
What
was most disturbing about the President’s speech was his inability to articulate
the American Presidency as a continuum. While no one in government has anywhere
near the power of the President, the Country is far more than one man or one
woman. The President guides the ship, at times veering right and at other times
leaning left. What is important is that whoever the President is, he (or she) must
ensure that the basic tenets of freedom are left intact.
Perhaps
the most important message was that delivered by Michael Bloomberg at Harvard. It
was a civil call to allow dissidents to be heard, a time to remember that
minority rights are protected by the Constitution. Infringing on those rights
is a crime against the state. More and more so-called liberals have abandoned a
commitment to free speech. We saw that when the President publically rebuked
the Supreme Court during his 2010 State of the Union speech for their decision
in Citizens United v. FEC. We see it
in Senator Harry Reid’s attempts to silence the Koch brothers, and recently in
Senator Tom Udall’s proposed amendment to give Congress plenary power to
regulate free speech – a proposal that, incredibly, has been endorsed by 41
Democratic Senators.
Most
visibly this threat to free speech has gained support in universities and
colleges, supposedly bastions of old fashion liberalism. It is within those
ivied halls where minority rights have become most endangered. “Intolerance of
ideas – whether liberal or conservative – is antithetical to individual rights
and free societies, and it is no less antithetical to great universities and
first-rate scholarship.” He equated the censorship of ideas that do not conform
to conventional thinking as a “modern form of McCarthyism.” And that it is, but
in this case it is more insidious and thus more damaging. It operates with the
full support of America ’s
greatest universities, as well as with most of the governing classes in Washington .
“Isn’t
the purpose of a university,” asked the former Mayor, “to stir discussion, not
silence it?” “Why did administrators not step in to prevent the mob from
silencing speech?” One might well have asked the same of Nazis in 1930s Germany , or in China during the Cultural
Revolution in the 1960s. Innumerable college administrators bowed to pressure
from students and faculty to rescind invitations from those with whom they
politically disagreed. Such cowardice was reprehensible. It was, as Mr.
Bloomberg said, “an outrage.”
No
one party has a monopoly on what is right and fair. Our system of government was
established so that it would include the thoughts and ideas of diverse citizens
from myriad backgrounds. No place is better suited to be the foundry where such
ideas are forged than a university. Toward the end of his speech, Mr. Bloomberg
made clear the responsibilities of a university in a free society: “A
university’s obligation is not to teach students what to think but to teach
students how to think.” Amen! Mr. Bloomberg received a standing ovation for
attacking the lion in his den.
The
third graduation address was sheer inspiration. It was the kind of red meat
that even Vegans need from time to time. Admiral William McRaven, a graduate of
the University of
Texas and former
commander of SEAL Team 3, spoke before his Alma Mater on May 17. His ten pieces
of advice, all lessons learned at basic SEAL training in Coronado , California ,
are embedded in a decades-old culture, familiar to our forefathers and are as
relevant today as they were then.
The
lessons he spoke about are personal…and ageless: get little things done; learn
from failure; work together; don’t back down from challenges, be honorable, and
don’t be a quitter.
(In
my family, a recent example of persistence occurred this past April when my
daughter-in-law Beatriz saw her 250 page manuscript disappear into the nether
reaches of the cloud or the mist. All that she had written, perhaps 80,000
words, vanished. It proved to be unrecoverable. Her initial reaction was one of
anger and frustration, but she took some deep breaths, sat down and re-wrote
the story.)
Admiral
McRaven learned his lessons in SEAL training, but these traits can be learned
by anyone, anywhere, at any time. They require only focus and self-discipline.
They serve to build character, responsibility, self-reliance and success – characteristics
critical to a free and financially independent people. They are lessons
particularly relevant as our government promotes dependency – a cradle to grave
environment so vividly depicted in Obama’s campaign portrayal, “The Life of
Julia,” which followed a 3-year old young girl to a woman of 67. Redistribution
cannot substitute for aspiration and perspiration. Redistribution penalizes the
dependent. Redistribution enhances inequality; it doesn’t reduce it.
In
his 2000 book Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam described how we have become
increasingly disconnected from family, friends, neighbors, our community and
democratic structures. We attend fewer community meetings and belong to fewer
local organizations. We may still be bowling, but increasingly we are bowling
alone. One of the lessons Admiral McRaven learned was the importance of working
together. In his case it was the necessity of six men and a coxswain to paddle
as a team to get through an eight-foot surf; for us, it is the importance of
partnerships in marriage, business, community service and politics.
There
are lessons in all three commencement addresses. Too many politicians hold
Party above Country. The President of a republic such as ours has a
responsibility, not just to those who elected him, but to the people. He must
recognize that he (or she) is but one person in a long line. To treat
predecessors as evil is to demean the office he holds temporarily. A focus on
inequality, magnifies the distinctions between rich and poor, but fails to consider
how products that made a few people rich have improved the lifestyles of
millions of others. Politicians compartmentalize the electorate for their
convenience, while ignoring the fact that doing so serves to divide, not unite.
To be politically correct is to ignore problems, not confront them. It leads to
the arrogance that has come to define our universities – an unwillingness to hear
contrary views.
Admiral
McRaven’s first lesson: make your bed every morning. Little things matter. If
you start the day with an accomplished task, you are more likely to see other
deeds well done. Good advice and a good starting point, at a time when dissonance
and dislocation describe our culture.
Labels: TOTD
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home