DULUTH – With Lake Superior roiling behind him, Gov. Tim Walz returned to his role as a history teacher Thursday in an appeal for civility and peace in the aftermath of the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
"It's been difficult, but once again the choice is for us to make the choices that previous generations made, to figure out a way to get together and solve the problem and move forward," Walz said. "This is the hardest thing to do."
Walz's visit to Duluth concluded a multicity tour of some of the state's historic monuments this week in response to the violence at the Capitol, underscoring the fragile state of the country's institutions and politics.
"If we don't do this right, things will continue to get worse," he said. "I don't think we should just assume."
The governor highlighted the war memorials along the Lakewalk as evidence that the volunteers who installed them "knew we would stand at a time in 2021 with our nation kind of on the brink again, and there might be a need to tell that story," he said in front of the USS Duluth anchor.
Dan Streu, who served aboard the USS Duluth in Vietnam, spoke about his experience the day the ship earned its Combat Action Ribbon and the efforts to have the ship, which served from 1965 to 2005, memorialized in its namesake city.
Walz, who served 24 years in the Army National Guard, said the Vietnam era was a "very divisive time in the country," but America endured.
"We've done it, and we can do it again," he said.