Subject: “Onward, gallant ladies, gallant gentlemen.”

The way you carry your strength matters.

 

“We could use a return to gallantry,” a recent newspaper column by Peggy Noonan, is a subtle reminder.

Gallantry is being the victor and refusing to humiliate. It’s Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox treating Robert E. Lee with perfectly calibrated respect, letting Lee’s officers keep their sidearms and his men their personal horses. It is George H.W. Bush refusing to rub the Soviet Union’s face in it when the West won the Cold War.

Ed Coan, the greatest powerlifter of all time, is the ultimate gentleman who let his lifts do the talking and never humiliated his opponents.

...Gallantry is male-coded and shouldn’t be. A history of gallant women is the history of the world... Jackie Kennedy, her life blasted away on a Friday afternoon, held her poise and on Monday maintained public ritual in the funeral of her husband, because the country needed it and history demanded it.

 

...It is a world in which people are obsessed with claiming their rights and not accepting their duties. Public speech is mean, strength is vulgar.

 

Gallantry goes against all this. It says you can push without humiliating, be decisive without being brutal.

 

It shows we can be better. It proves we are better.

Just Added

Last Call

  • SFG II Certification: Dallas, TX—June 13-14, 2026

  • SFG I Certification: Boise, ID—June 19-21, 2026