The 37th Commandant of the Marine Corps published “A Letter to America” last week — he joined ALL MARINE RADIO to discuss why he wrote it and what he hopes will be achieved by publishing his thoughts. Neller is no stranger to leadership on “white hot” issues as he led the Marine Corps during the politically charged “Marines United” controversy in which Marines were accused of posting compromising images of female Marines online in a private group. We’ll talk about leadership lessons learned during that period and his challenge to white and black Americans, to law enforcement officers and leaders.
WATCH: You can watch US Air Force General (Chief of Staff nominee) C.Q. Brown’s video HERE
BOOK: The Anatomy of Courage: The Classic WWI Study of the Psychological Effects of War by John Moran (Author)
A Letter to America
* Published on June 3, 2020
Robert B. Neller
General USMC Retired
“Ships that pass in the night, and speak each other in passing, only a signal shown, and a distant voice in the darkness; so on the ocean of life, we pass and speak one another, only a look and a voice, then darkness again and a silence.”
-Henry Longfellow
As a white American, a baby boomer child of the 60’s and a veteran of 44 years of service as a US Marine I felt both frustration, anger and great sorrow as I watched the video of the killing of George Floyd by a group of police officers in Minneapolis. I cannot get out my mind the lack of emotion on the faces of the officers as Mr. Floyd said repeatedly, “I can’t breathe.” And all this transpiring while others called out for the officers to let him up, though none physically intervened. At the same time, it is with some understanding but again sadness I watch the destruction of neighborhoods in our Nation as demonstrators, most local citizens, but including some professional agitators, express their anger and frustration over another killing of a black man by police that, to the great majority of Americans it was clear, did not have to die. At the same time some violate the law by attacking police, looting and burning businesses in their communities, many of which are unlikely to return or rebuild. You are justifiably angry.
So, what do we do now? …. Continue as we have like Longfellow’s two ships in the night? Wait for the rage to pass, as eventually it will, and then go back to whatever normal is in our COVID world of today? Do we as white Americans just take comfort in our own view that “I am not a racist and I raised my children to judge people by the color of their heart and character and not the color of their skin, their religion or their sexual preference? ” In other words, like most Americans of all races/ethnicity, remain supportive of the intent of the demonstrations, but also remain publicly, silent taking comfort in our own actions to be a man or woman of virtue, equality and character and hope and pray that over time things will get better?
I am sure that today this is not enough.
The time for being silent has passed, at least for me.
I have many friends in the law enforcement profession and have interacted personally and professionally with many Police Officers and emergency responders, a great number of whom are military veterans. They have an incredibly difficult job dealing with in m...