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american dream

Casting Our Light to Forge the Next Even Greater Generation

The American Dream has become the American Nightmare, and for some, the American Fantasy.

We see it in the quiet erosion of trust between neighbors, the sharp edges of division that slice through families at dinner tables, and the growing sense that opportunity belongs to someone else. We feel it in the weight of economic uncertainty that presses down on working families, in the fury of storms that grow fiercer while we argue over whose fault it is, and in the digital glow of screens that connect us to the world yet leave us lonelier than ever. Truth itself feels fragile—warped by algorithms, shouted over by outrage, and drowned out by noise. Equality remains a promise unfulfilled for too many, while the very idea of shared purpose sometimes seems like a relic from another age.

We did not inherit a perfect nation. No generation does. But we did inherit something far more valuable: the living example of the Greatest Generation. They stood in breadlines and on battlefields. They turned factories into arsenals and backyards into victory gardens. They did not wait for perfect conditions or easy answers. They met their moment with resilience forged in fire, with a sense of duty that asked not “What’s in it for me?” but “What does my neighbor, my community, my country need?” They built more than they were given and planted trees whose shade they would never fully enjoy. Their torch was passed to us—still burning, yet dimmer in places because we have sometimes forgotten how to carry it.

My dream for America is not a return to some idealized past. It is boundless because it looks forward—unlimited by the fears of this moment, powered by the same unyielding spirit that has defined us at our best. It is a dream where ordinary citizens once again rise as the Next Even Greater Generation, not because we are better than those who came before, but because the stakes are higher, the tools are greater, and the circle of our responsibility is wider.

This dream will not be realized by wishing. It demands intention. It demands willpower—the most powerful weapon ever known to man, whose only safety is controlled by our ambition. In my years of service as a United States Marine, I learned that titles are given, but character is earned one deliberate step at a time. The same principle that guided me through the yellow footprints at Parris Island applies to every American today: transform your “wants” into ironclad intentions. Do not want a stronger community—intend to build it. Do not want unity—intend to live it through empathy, forgiveness, and daily acts of servant leadership. Take that full 30-inch step toward the greatest version of yourself, and watch how your light spreads.

The concrete path forward is clear.

First, we reclaim our minds and our thoughts. Every day, we choose discipline over distraction, gratitude over grievance, and truth over convenience. We teach our children—and remind ourselves—the fourteen leadership traits that have always made Marines and Americans exceptional: unselfishness, integrity, judgment, decisiveness, tact, initiative, enthusiasm, bearing, endurance, dependability, loyalty, courage, knowledge, and justice. These are not slogans. They are tools for daily life.

Second, we meet our greatest challenges head-on with collective purpose. Climate and the common good are not partisan issues—they are tests of whether we will leave our children a habitable home. Technology is not our master; it must become a servant to humanity, amplifying connection rather than isolation. Division yields only to empathy practiced in neighborhoods, workplaces, and yes, even across political aisles. Fragile truth is strengthened when ordinary citizens demand and model intellectual honesty. Equality is reimagined not through resentment but through opportunity earned and extended. Global citizenship does not diminish patriotism—it expands it, reminding us that America’s light shines brightest when it illuminates the path for others.

Third, we redefine patriotism as action. It is spelled with verbs: serve, build, listen, sacrifice, show up. It lives in the teacher who stays late, the neighbor who checks on the elderly, the worker who mentors the next generation, the citizen who votes with principle and volunteers with heart. We do not need permission from Washington to begin. The power resides in us.

This is not abstract hope. It is a practical, proven blueprint drawn from the crucible of Marine leadership and the quiet wisdom of the Titans of Truth who have guided my own journey. When each of us casts our light—far and wide—we create a radiance no darkness can overcome. Our relationships deepen. Our purpose clarifies. Our influence multiplies. Our nation heals.

I have spent more than half my life in the uniform of this Republic, sworn to defend it against all enemies, foreign and domestic. That oath never ended. Today it simply extends beyond the ranks of Marines I still call my sons and daughters to every American who feels the tug of conscience and the call of duty. The next chapter of our story is being written right now—in living rooms and school cafeterias, in city councils and community centers, in quiet acts of courage that no camera will ever capture.

My dream for America is boundless because it rests not on one person, one party, or one policy, but on We the People—awakened, intentional, and unstoppable. It is a dream where the American Nightmare fades, the Fantasy becomes reality, and every citizen stands taller, knowing they played their part in forging the Next Even Greater Generation.

The torch is in our hands.

The question is no longer whether we can carry it.

The question is whether we will. YES, WE WILL.

Now is the time. Take the step. Cast your light. May we ALL become the beacons of light the Titans spoke of.