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I went to Fort Wadsworth
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[music]
>> I'm standing right [music] now in front
of one of the most important military
positions in American history, Fort
Wadsworth. Look around [music] this
place.
Giant stone walls, the cannons, the
tunnels, the cliffs overlooking the
harbor. [music] For more than 200 years,
nations understood something
terrifyingly simple. If this point fell,
New York City was exposed. This fort was
built to guard the entrance to New York
Harbor. Enemy ships entering these
waters would have faced [music]
overwhelming firepower. Soldiers stood
here day and night protecting millions
of people they would never meet [music]
because think about it. Think about what
they were protecting. New York City is
without question the single most
influential city [music]
on planet Earth. The world's commerce is
here. The world's media is here. The
world's finance [music] is here. The
world's culture is here. The world's
politics are here. If you wanted to
damage America, [music]
you would target New York. So, of course
it requires a defense system. Of course
there were walls. Of course there were
guards. Of course there were barriers.
[music] Of course there were protections
because the more valuable something is,
the more protection it requires. And yet
somehow when it comes to our own souls,
>> [music]
>> modern society suddenly acts confused by
this idea. Inside every single Yid is an
neshama worth more than $10 million, $10
trillion.
A piece of the rabbinic neshama that's
eternal and infinite and holy.
>> [music]
>> And yet people get uncomfortable the
minute you start talking about walls and
boundaries. And they say, "Why can't I
watch what I want? Why can't I go
anywhere? Why can't [music] I hear
everything? Why can't I expose myself to
everything?" What do you mean why? You
don't have a Manhattan without a Fort
[music] Wadsworth. You won't just say,
"Eh, let everybody in. Whatever happens
happens." It's insanity. Every
civilization in history understands that
if you don't guard the gates, eventually
the enemy walks in.
>> [music]
>> Our spiritual lives are the same way.
The yetzer hara never arrives in your in
your life just holding a giant sign
[music] saying, "Hello, I'm here to
destroy your life." No, he slips through
openings and small compromises, [music]
tiny little breaches, unprotected
entrances, one image, one conversation,
one environment, one addiction, one
[music] poisonous influence after
another, after another, until suddenly
the person himself doesn't even
recognize what happened. [music]
And that's why the Torah gives us
defenses. That's why we build Fort
Wadsworth in our [music] life. Not
because Judaism is afraid of the outside
world of life, because Judaism
understands [music] value. Of course we
have to protect our bodies because the
body houses the neshama. Of course we
should avoid certain environments
[music] filled with lashon hara and
filth and negativity. Why would you
expose something holy to spiritual
pollution? Of course we need boundaries
and standards [music]
and filters and self-control. The
stronger and more precious something is,
>> [music]
>> the more protection it deserves. Nobody
mocks a billionaire for having security
guards. Nobody laughs at a country for
protecting its borders. But [music] the
moment a Jew protects his soul with an
extra filter, a little more tzniut, a
little more restraint [music] in where
you're willing to go, suddenly people
act like it's strange. You're an
extremist.
No, it's not strange. It's called
wisdom. Fort Wadsworth teaches us
something powerful. The soldier standing
guard [music] here understood that the
entire city of New York behind them
depended on whether the gates held
strong. And the same is true for us
because every thought you allow in,
[music] every image, every influence,
every environment is either
strengthening your inner world or it's
weakening [music] it. And maybe the
greatest tragedy in modern society is
that people spend fortunes protecting
their phones, their homes, their bank
accounts, their social security numbers,
their [music] passwords, their
identities while leaving their souls
completely unguarded. A Yid protects
what is precious. [music]
A Yid remembers that not everything
deserves entrance into the palace
because the soul is too valuable to
leave [music] undefended.