10/25/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/25/2025 21:10
"Building a school like this at Brown is such a wonderful thing, because that interdisciplinarity that is needed to make progress on the world's most difficult policy problems, it just comes here naturally in the air," Friedman said. "People are so committed to reaching out to find those connections, and that's how the Watson School is going to build and thrive."
While it may be a challenging political moment for Brown to launch a policy school, he added, this moment in history calls for innovation: "It's exactly because of the challenges in the world - whether it's higher education or the very quickly shifting policy landscape here in the U.S. [and] internationally - what better moment to have the opportunity to build something that's really new and forward-looking," he said.
Milley, a retired four-star general of the U.S. Army who served as the 20th chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and retired after 43 years of service, asked Brown and Watson School students to study the nation's foundational documents as well as the guidelines of international order established at the end of WW-II.
Even at the nation finds itself amid political challenges, it's important to view current events through the lens of history, he added. While the systems of governance that establish order domestically and internationally are currently "stressed," he said, "we have to be careful about thinking that today is the worst it's ever been," referencing tumultuous moments of the past, including the economic devastation of the Great Depression and the political unrest of the Vietnam War-era.
"We are in a period today where there's… contention, there is anxiety, domestically and internationally…" Milley said. "We need to maturely work through that with a degree of rationality and civility amongst ourselves, but we ought not also think that the sky is falling and the walls are coming in and it's all over. I have lived a good part of my professional life in countries that are actually in civil war. That is not the United States… I'm not saying there are not red flags waving in the wind. I'm not saying there are not challenges. That's true, but let's not jump to conclusions as to where we are as a country."
For those considering careers in public service, he stressed the importance of integrity, candor and the "willingness to speak to the truth."
"You want to be able to do that every single day, day in and day out, no matter who you're dealing with," Milley said. "And fundamental to character is having a genuine and real sense of humility."