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January 1, MEMORIAL DAY MESSAGE: What George Floyd’s Death Really Taught America

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Wyatt’s Take

  • A conservative voice calls for honest reflection on the George Floyd tragedy without political manipulation
  • Memorial Day reminds us that real unity comes from honoring truth, sacrifice, and the rule of law
  • The riots and chaos that followed Floyd’s death damaged communities the left claimed to protect

This Memorial Day weekend, as Americans gather to honor those who gave their lives for our freedom, one conservative commentator is calling for an honest conversation about George Floyd — one that strips away the political theater and focuses on what his death actually revealed about our country.

The tragic death of George Floyd in Minneapolis became a flashpoint that exposed deep divisions in America. But what happened afterward — the riots, the looting, the demonization of police — showed something even more troubling about how the left weaponizes tragedy for political gain.

While Democrats and their media allies turned Floyd into a symbol for their radical agenda, working Americans watched their neighborhoods burn. Small businesses built over generations were destroyed overnight. Police officers who serve their communities honorably were vilified and abandoned by cowardly politicians.

The “defund the police” movement that followed Floyd’s death didn’t make communities safer. Crime rates exploded in cities that slashed police budgets. The people hurt most? The very minority communities Democrats claimed they were protecting.

Memorial Day is about remembering those who sacrificed for American values — freedom, justice, and the rule of law. Floyd’s death was a tragedy that demanded accountability, and the officer responsible was prosecuted and convicted. That’s how the system is supposed to work.

But the left wanted revolution, not justice. They wanted to tear down institutions rather than reform them. They wanted division rather than healing.

Real Americans — black, white, and brown — who live in high-crime neighborhoods know the truth. They don’t want fewer police. They want effective, accountable policing that protects their families and respects their dignity.

The George Floyd incident should have brought us together around common-sense reforms. Instead, radical leftists used it to push socialism, critical race theory, and an anti-American agenda that sees racism in everything and solutions in nothing except more government control.

This Memorial Day, we honor the men and women who died defending the Constitution and the freedoms it guarantees. That includes the right to equal justice under law — something that benefits everyone when we let it work rather than burning it down.

The real lesson from George Floyd’s death isn’t that America is irredeemably racist. It’s that we’re a nation still striving toward our ideals, capable of accountability, and strong enough to survive even when politicians try to exploit tragedy for power.

We don’t need to abolish police. We need to support good officers and remove bad ones. We don’t need to teach our children that America is evil. We need to teach them that America, for all its flaws, remains the greatest nation on earth — worth fighting for, worth improving, worth defending.

Wyatt Matters

Working Americans don’t want lectures from coastal elites about racism and injustice. They want safe streets, strong communities, and leaders who tell the truth instead of peddling division for votes. This Memorial Day, honor those who sacrificed for America by rejecting the radicals who want to tear it apart. Real patriotism means fixing problems, not exploiting them.

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Wyatt Porter is a seasoned writer and constitutional scholar who brings a rugged authenticity and deep-seated patriotism to his work. Born and raised in small-town America, Wyatt grew up on a farm, where he learned the value of hard work and the pride that comes from it. As a conservative voice, he writes with the insight of a historian and the grit of a lifelong laborer, blending logic with a sharp wit. Wyatt’s work captures the struggles and triumphs of everyday Americans, offering readers a fresh perspective grounded in traditional values, individual freedom, and an unwavering love for his country.




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