This
week we celebrate President’s Day. George
Washington, our first President and Commander-in-Chief said, “I hope I shall possess firmness and
virtue enough to maintain what I consider the most enviable of all titles, the
character of an honest man.”
In the military, we have high ethical and moral expectations of
our fellow servicemen and, even more so, of our commanders, to include, maybe
especially, the Commander-in-Chief.
Trust is the glue that holds organizations together. It’s impossible in words to express the
contempt a soldier has for someone, especially a leader, who will lie to
them. This is embodied in West Point's
Cadet Honor Code: "A cadet will not
lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do."
I was a captain in the
75th Ranger Regiment when Bill Clinton became President. The third stanza of the Ranger Creed says in
part, “I
will always keep myself mentally alert, physically strong, and morally
straight.” It was impossible to be
unaware of the “bimbo eruptions” -- ultimately highlighted by the scandal
involving his dalliance with his subordinate, Monica Lewinsky. My thought was always, “if he would do that
to his wife, what would he do to me?”
I’m sure Mrs. Clinton is a royal pain, but still – he took the vow. “I did not have sexual
relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.” The DNA evidence said differently, Mr.
President.
The irony: Clinton lied
to the entire country and kept his job; a General was fired for telling the
truth. The New York Times reported in
June of 1993 on an Air Force
inquiry finding that “Major
General Harold N. Campbell called Mr. Clinton a "dope-smoking”,
“skirt-chasing”, “draft-dodging” Commander-in-Chief in a speech last month in
the Netherlands.” In fact, we also
knew that Bill Clinton loathed us. While in England as a Rhodes Scholar, Clinton
wrote a letter to COL Eugene Holmes of the University of Arkansas ROTC
department thanking him for, “saving
me from the draft” and explaining his “loathing the military.” Sadly,
we knew that what the general said was completely true. Nevertheless, Clinton lied; the
General fried.
Shift now to our current Commander-in-Chief. We all know politicians say things in order
to get elected, but principle can only be compromised so much before one is
rightly regarded as “unprincipled” or worse, a flat-out liar. In the military, one of the most disparaging
comments that can be made about a leader is to say, “He’s a politician.” According to a recent
Military
Times survey of almost 2,300 active-duty service members,
“Approval of Obama — never high to begin with — has crumbled, falling from 35
percent in 2009 to just 15 percent this year, while his disapproval ratings
have increased to 55 percent from 40 percent.”
David Axlerod, the Obama
political campaign strategist, and later, senior White House advisor, in his new
book Believer: My Forty Years in Politics
writes that Barack Obama misled
Americans for his own political benefit when he claimed: a) If you like your doctor, you can keep your
doctor; b) Benghazi was the result of a video; c) There is not a smidgen of
corruption at the IRS; d) Yemen is a success; e) The border is secure and
deportations are higher than ever; or f) None of the above? If you guessed f, you’re correct.
Time magazine reports, “Axelrod writes that he knew
Obama was in favor of same-sex marriages during the first (2008) presidential
campaign, even as Obama publicly said he only supported civil unions, not full
marriages. Axelrod also admits to counseling Obama to conceal that position for
political reasons. ‘Opposition to gay marriage was particularly strong in the
black church, and as he ran for higher office, he grudgingly accepted the
counsel of more pragmatic folks like me, and modified his position to support
civil unions rather than marriage, which he would term a sacred union’.” As a candidate for president, Obama told Rick
Warren’s Saddleback Church that marriage is only for heterosexual couples, “I believe that marriage is the union between a man and a
woman.”
King Solomon,
purportedly the wisest man to ever live, said, “Eloquent lips are unsuited to a godless
fool— how much worse lying
lips to a ruler!” Frankly, I’m not sure
if 85% of the military doesn’t like Obama’s difficulty with honesty, his policies,
or both. Maybe Ben Franklin was on to something
when he said, “Honesty is the best policy.”
As young George said, “I cannot tell a lie.” What we really
need now is a Washington in Washington.
Well said, Colonel. A Washington in Washington is crucially needed. There are two quotes cited below from the first inaugural address of President George Washington on April 30, 1789 that serve to caution the voting body of our nation (i.e. "We the people"), warning us that we are stewards of our God-given liberty, assuring us that there are consequences for the abandonment of the moral principles "which Heaven itself has ordained." On the 2016 horizon, we may select our leadership from a cadre of God-fearing men of integrity who have demonstrated the competence to lead, or we may choose a leader that is not constrained by the inconvenience of integrity. May God grant us mercy in a national revival that reflects a different image of "we the people" in the highest office of our land. President Washington nailed it with the following statements at the onset of the "experiment" of our nation's government, confirming principles so vital to our national welfare:
ReplyDelete"The preservation of the sacred fire of liberty, and the destiny of the republican model of government, are justly considered deeply, perhaps as finally, staked on the experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people."
"The propitious smiles of Heaven can never be expected on a nation that disregards the eternal rules of order and right, which Heaven itself has ordained."
A Washington is needed in the national expression of "We the People", the stewards of our liberty, to the end that we may also be granted, by God's grace, a Washington in Washington. Let us therefore pray, watch, labor, and vote to this end.