The new book by Jack Hoban |
I’ve also trained with Jack in martial arts - he’s arguably one of the best in the world. His background and experiences are of the (very) few, certainly not the many: US Marine Corps officer, MBA, successful businessman/owner, father, husband, president of RGI, and a sought-after speaker and leader for many within LE and military communities including the NYPD. And to boot, he’s a “Subject Matter Expert” for the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program, which takes him regularly to Camp Quantico, Virginia, to train active-duty Marines.
All this stems from his
mentorship under two men: A diplomat sage, who may have just figured out the
meaning of life, and Japan’s last living Ninja. Yeah, Jack Hoban is that guy. Jack
is also a mentor of mine. The reason is in this book.
“The Ethical Warrior” is the
culmination of decades of hard-learning and moral failures by a stubborn young
Marine trained to kill and judge others with contempt. It is the story of transformation
and more importantly the exquisite activation of an “ethical warrior.” The work
is both autobiographical and how-to guide; an instruction in “anti-intuitive”
thinking to reach the “common sense,” so desperately needed in this age.
There
is renewed focus on ethics within law enforcement and the military - keenly
aware a ‘win the people’ philosophy is crucial, whether in the
United States or around the world. Jack’s message is simple: Save lives - all
lives - innocent, professional, and even perpetrator, if tactically possible.
To
do this Jack’s developed a keen understanding of nothing less than the
profound: A simple, practical theory of human nature providing directions to
resolve individual conflict - even war, respect the equality of our fellow
person, improve cross-cultural relations, reject dehumanization, and articulate
a fundamental recipe for human happiness.
He examines becoming your best person, the root causes
of conflict, and how to be certain personal values are, in fact, “valuable.” He also uncovers
humanity’s core values and submits the possibility of the existence of a universal
value - one so compelling it can qualify and adjudicate every other competing
personal, societal value. Jack’s theory may also serve to better protect from the psycho-spiritual
damage that occurs in having to contend with violence, and there is great hope
it may even lower rates of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and suicide.
When
our role within the human condition is clarified, we make ourselves aware of the
natural rights and duties that exist toward each other, and can voluntarily
choose to place ourselves at greater risk – spiritually, emotionally, and in
some cases, even physically - to protect and defend the welfare and lives of
those around us. But in order to do so, we need direction, instruction, and a
guide, who knows the way.
As far as I'm concerned, "self-reliance" never goes out of style. By reading the book, we can grant activation of our own Ethical Warrior to be the guide for ourselves and others.
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