Alumni Work: War or Common Cause?: A Critical
Ethnography
of Language
Education
Policy, Race,
and Cultural
Citizenship
Read more
Chris Meyer (G.N.O. '04) was in his second year as a Teach For America corps member when Hurricane Katrina hit. The disaster turned out to be a catalyst. Meyer was "fed up with the failure of public leadership," he recalls. "I wanted to get hard skills to figure out how to become an effective advocate." So he made it happen. After winning a highly competitive White House Fellowship, Meyer was placed as a special assistant at the Department of Defense, where he has been able to observe the workings of wartime governance. He took a few moments from his schedule to speak with us.
By Karen B. Manahan
ONE DAY: What are you working
on now?
I'm going to Parris Island to
learn about basic training and
how we [take soldiers] right off the bus
[and turn them into] Marines. We send
them [to Iraq and Afghanistan] and
say "This is when you use lethal force;
this is when you need softer skills like
diplomacy; this is when you need to be
a health care worker, a school teacher,
a traffic cop." I'm fascinated by how
we take an 18- or 19-year-old and give them so much responsibility. We make
policy in a box in the Pentagon, and it's
helpful to see how it affects training
and troops in the field.
ONE DAY: What has been the most
surprising moment?
It was in Afghanistan. I was
having lunch with a small group
in the mess hall and across the table
was a female soldier that went to high
school with my sister. I thought, "Wow,
where am I?" Her first trip out of
the country was with the Air Force
to Afghanistan. She was making the
ultimate commitment to public service
and was going to re-enlist. It brought
everything back home.
ONE DAY: What is Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates like?
He's a really funny guy with a
great dry sense of humor. He
also understands how history continues
to influence today, that you can
always look further back than you can
look forward.
ONE DAY: How does it feel
to be working with all these
public figures?
The fellowship is a gift, and you
want to keep that in mind the whole
time. Our director said: "You [may have]
heard from a grandfather that they met
President Truman and shook his hand.
You just spent three hours in the Oval
Office with the president." I still have
moments where I just think, "This is
so incredible."
ONE DAY: What are your
future plans?
Louisiana needs talented people,
and thankfully lots are flocking
to the state, but we still need people to
come back home. I'd like to be a part of
that. I'm still committed to New Orleans
students and education and would like to
focus on that for a few years. I'd also like
to volunteer to help wounded warriors
find jobs to stay connected to the work
I've done here.





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