A FRESH LOOK AT DUTY, HONOR, AND VALOR
I delivered these remarks to the Pulaski County Bar Association during its luncheon to recognize Veterans Day.
A FRESH LOOK AT DUTY,
HONOR, AND VALOR
©Wendell Griffen, 2021
Pulaski County Bar
Association
Little Rock, Arkansas
November 12, 2021
PRESIDENT
ROGERS
OTHER
PCBA OFFICERS
DIRECTORS
COLLEAGUES
Thank you for inviting me to join you
today as the Pulaski County Bar Association recognizes the sacrifice and
service given by people who have served in the Armed Forces of the United
States. I am a veteran. My father, father-in-law, and several uncles and
cousins were veterans. Veterans Day holds great meaning for me.
I invite you to join me in taking a
fresh look at three words that have special meaning for people who have
military service experience: Duty, Honor, and Valor.
On May 12, 1973, I took the following oath:
I,
Wendell Griffen, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the
Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic;
that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this
obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and
that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I
am about to enter. So help me God.
My father – who served in the Army
during World War II – and my mother – who had a brother serve during World War
II – watched me take that oath. I took it with men (there were no women in my
ROTC classes at that time) who, like me, became Army and Air Force officers.
With our oaths, we pledged to support and
defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and
domestic. That is why I learned to parachute from planes at Fort Benning,
Georgia. That is why I learned to deploy field artillery weapons at Fort Sill,
Oklahoma. That is why I learned to keep my wits and crawl through obstacles
while under live gunfire.
The oath people take when entering military
service is not an oath to support and defend any political party. It is not an
oath to support and defend any economic system, be it capitalism or any other.
It is not an oath to support and defend any religion, be it whatever religion
the oath-taker holds, another religion, or no religion. It is not an oath to
support and defend any faction.
It is an oath to support and defend a set of
values. One takes that oath believing that those values are worth supporting.
One takes that oath believing those values are worth defending. One takes that
oath knowing that those values do not support and protect themselves.
People support and defend the values of liberty
and justice mentioned in the Constitution. People support and defend the values
of representational democracy. People support and defend the values of checks
and balances on governmental power. People support and defend the values of
judicial review of legislative and executive actions. People support and defend
the values of elections.
The oath people take on entering military
service is based on hard lessons across history that teach another truth.
People must support and defend the values mentioned in the Constitution because
those values are always subject to being undermined and attacked – get this – by
enemies, foreign and domestic, who are people!
Let me speak with you about three things, basic
to supporting and defending the Constitution, that people who enter military
service are taught: Duty. Honor. Valor.
We learn that supporting and defending the
values of liberty and justice outlined in our Constitution is a patriotic duty.
A basic factor in fulfilling that duty involves knowing whether someone is an
enemy to the Constitution. It is the age-old work people who pull sentry duty
perform of recognizing whether someone is a friend or foe.
The enemy trying to undermine and overthrow the
Constitution may be from a different society. However, the enemy may be someone
who lives among us, even kin to us. The Civil War was fought by people who
lived in the same society. People who had been friends – even schoolmates –
took different sides.
Discerning the difference between friends and
foes to liberty and justice is a fundamental duty that is drilled into and
discharged by people who serve in the military. The people who watch sonar and
radar systems are trying to detect whether objects on their screens are threats
to be confronted and countered. People on foot patrols are watching their
surroundings to detect whether others in their vicinity may be adversaries.
Such vigilance and discernment are duties that cannot be neglected.
Honor means keeping faith with duty. The duty
to support and defend the Constitution does not fulfill itself. It is only
fulfilled by faithful service. Fidelity to that duty requires mental, physical,
emotional, moral, and materiel readiness. It requires knowledge about the
strengths and vulnerabilities of allies and enemies.
Valor is the third element needed to support
and defend the Constitution. Valor involves courage to act during deadly
situations, even at the risk of one’s life. It happens when a soldier throws
herself on a live grenade. It happens when a medic runs to treat a wounded
comrade in the thick of a battle. It happens when a unit fights to the death so
that others can escape to fight another day. It is what happens when people look
on situations involving danger, disaster, and death, defy those risks, and
honor duty. Because acts of valor involve such great and often irreparable
risks, we should never be casual or flippant about sending people into harm’s
way.
Veterans Day also reminds me of other things I
learned as a soldier. I learned that we have a duty to rescue comrades who have
been wounded and captured by enemies. We have an ongoing duty to remember
comrades who have given their lives. And, we have a duty to ensure that the
families of captured, wounded, and fallen comrades are supported and protected.
Veterans Day also reminds me that we have a
duty to care for comrades who have been wounded and scarred – physically, emotionally,
and morally – by the peculiar harrowing senseless violence of war. In the first
instance, I believe that duty involves doing our best to avoid war. War is
always a violent human experience involving mass murder. As such, it should be
embraced only as the final choice for countering a threatening adversary, not
the first.
If
anyone needs help understanding why, I suggest that person should walk – not
drive – through a battlefield cemetery. Walk and read the names on headstones.
Mark the dates of death. Listen to the silence. If you are not affected by the
experience something sacred within you has died.
It is tempting to end my remarks by calling on
us to recommit ourselves to remembering the fallen and honoring those who have
survived military service. However, I beg your continued attention a bit longer.
I want to connect their service and sacrifice to our work as lawyers.
The day after the January 6, 2021, insurrection
I spoke by phone with one of my two uncles who are retired Army colonels. We
agreed that the frontal assault on and violent incursion into the US Capitol we
separately viewed in real time the previous day was an attempt to undermine and
overthrow the Constitution. We shared our disappointment that the assault and
incursion occurred.
As former officers from combat branches of the
Army, my uncle and I at once recognized that the assault and incursion was no
haphazard affair. It was an attempt to overthrow the Constitution, albeit
poorly executed. It was not a political demonstration. What we and the rest of
the world saw was a televised exercise in tyranny.
Days later, I watched members of the House of
Representatives and Senate – whose lives were threatened by the assault and
incursion and whose safety was protected by valiant members of the Capitol
Police and other law enforcement officers – debate whether to impeach and
convict Donald Trump for inciting the insurrection. Trump falsely claimed that
the 2020 presidential election that resulted in Joseph Biden receiving the
required number of Electoral College votes to be declared President of the
United States was stolen. Trump loyalists did not merely march to the Capitol.
They assaulted and violently overwhelmed Capitol Police who defended it. Trump
loyalists yelled death threats to members of Congress, the Senate, and Vice
President Mike Pence. The evidence of that behavior was not only “clear and
convincing.” It was “beyond reasonable doubt.”
Nevertheless, Members of Congress and the
Senate excused the January 6 insurrection. Congressmen Rick Crawford, French Hill, Steve
Womack, and Bruce Westerman voted against impeaching Donald Trump for inciting
the insurrection. Senators John Boozman and Tom Cotton voted against convicting
Donald Trump for inciting it.
Did they forget that the oath I took on May 12,
1973, was the same one they took when they entered office? Would they have
treated Russians who behaved as Trump loyalists did on January 6 as mere
demonstrators or would they have recognized them as enemies to the
Constitution of the United States?
Have we, lawyers and judges, behaved since then
as people who recognized a domestic threat to the Constitution of the United
States from elected officials who try to convince us that what happened on
January 6 was a peaceful demonstration? Do we lack the discernment needed for
knowing when enemies to democracy are not merely within our borders, but are
waging pitched battles in the US Capitol on behalf of a defeated politician
hellbent on defying the Constitution to remain in power?
What do our actions since January 6 say to the people
who pledged their lives to support and defend the Constitution of the United
States? What do our actions, as lawyers and judges, say to the people who
bear permanent physical and psychological scars from the wounds suffered at the
hands of the insurrectionists? What do our actions, as lawyers and judges, say
to the surviving relatives of the valiant people who fought and died defending
liberty, justice, and democracy?
Do we not owe those people respect? Should we
not lead the nation in condemning every person who planned, aided, and took
part in the insurrection?
Do we have enough commitment to duty to
recognize tyranny when we see it?
Do we have enough discipline to discharge the
duty to call out tyranny when we see it?
Do we have enough courage to face the slings
and arrows of right-wing media, authoritarian-hungry politicians, and others who
have shown they are ready, able, and determined to use violent means to hold
power?
I did not have those questions before January
6. I cannot ignore those questions now. For if Veterans Day means what we say
it does, you and I must be willing to discharge the duty of vigilance
concerning enemies to the values of liberty, justice, and democracy outlined in
the Constitution of the United States. That involves much more than engaging in
acts of political pietism such as standing up for the Pledge of Allegiance. It
involves more than flag-waving and conducting exercises in nationalistic
dogmatism. It involves much more than chanting “USA” at pep rallies and
political campaign events.
I did not share the same religious, political,
economic, or social background of each of the soldiers, sailors, marines, and
aviators with whom I served. We shared a devotion to duty, honor, and valor.
That devotion to duty, honor, and valor is what
drives people in the military to push past the limits of physical exertion and
pain. It drives them to overcome the human fear of death and throw themselves
into deadly situations. It drives them to get up when knocked down, fight on
when wounded, plot escape when captured, and fight on after comrades have
fallen.
Colleagues, I wonder if lawyers and judges have
that devotion to duty, honor, and valor. If so, it is past time for us to let
it show.
We can begin by calling supporters of tyranny
what they are: enemies to the Constitution of the United States. They are not
patriots. They are enemies to liberty, justice, and democracy. We should say
so.
We can honor the Constitution, each other, and
the people who have given and pledged their lives to support and defend it by
discharging the duty of vigilance and the obligation to oppose tyranny,
tyrants, and those who are working to overthrow the Constitution. This is no
time to be coy. The January 6 insurrection showed that supporters of fascism
are actively engaged in offensive moves to overthrow the Constitution. We
cannot support and defend the Constitution by pretending they are not doing so.
Facing and honoring our duty to the
Constitution requires that we meet threats. Those threats are not hypothetical
or speculative.
Voter suppression and intimidation is real.
Efforts to disenfranchise people of color, people who are poor, people who have
been incarcerated, and people who resist authoritarianism are real.
Those efforts are planned, financed, and conducted
by religious nationalists, white supremacists, domestic terrorists, and persons
who want to oppress women and girls. They are determined to oppress LGBTQI
persons, immigrants, people who do not hold the religious convictions expressed
by white evangelical Christians, and others. The targets and victims of those
efforts know too well that they live in a society that is in danger of becoming
a fascist empire.
Lawyers and judges must show the courage and
valor needed to face and fight the onslaught of tyranny from within our
society. As I would tell new law students, we are the Jedi Knights for the
nation.
Will we be seduced by greed, lust for power,
and status and use our knowledge and skill to undermine and overthrow the
Constitution and its values of liberty, justice, and democracy?
Will we close our eyes, turn our heads, and
ignore the march of tyranny in our time?
Or will we, like countless veterans, meet the
demands of duty, honor, and valor that must not only be discharged to honor the
service and sacrifice of veterans but are needed to protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States from domestic enemies determined to undermine
its liberties, dismantle its provisions for justice, and substitute tyranny for
democracy?
You and I must answer these questions. The
future of the nation – and the world – depends on how we answer
them. What will you do?
I hope my message is plain. Thank you for
listening to me.
Very well spoken and I totally agree with you Judge Griffin
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