One Reason Why The Greatest Generation Label Makes Sense
Nick Gillespie | March 23, 2006, 6:38pm
Donkey Cons notes the Calhoun (Ga.) Times' obit for a truly inspiring World War II hero, Desmond Doss:
According to his Medal of Honor citation, time after time, Doss' fellow soldiers witnessed how unafraid he was for his own safety. He was always willing to go after a wounded fellow, no matter how great the danger. On one occasion in Okinawa, he refused to take cover from enemy fire as he rescued approximately 75 wounded soldiers, carrying them one-by-one and lowering them over the edge of the 400-foot Maeda Escarpment. He did not stop until he had brought everyone to safety nearly 12 hours later.
When Doss received the Medal of Honor from President Truman, the President told him, "I'm proud of you, you really deserve this. I consider this a greater honor than being President."
Here's the twist: Doss was "raised a Seventh-day Adventist...[and] did not believe in using a gun or killing because of the sixth commandment which states, 'Thou shalt not kill' (Exodus 20:13). Doss was a patriot however, and believed in serving his country. During World War II, instead of accepting a deferment, Doss voluntarily joined the Army as a conscientious objector. Assigned to the 307th Infantry Division as a company medic he was harassed and ridiculed for his beliefs, yet he served with distinction."
In fact, he's the only CO to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Whole piece here.
Update: Ashley Doherty writes to point out that at least one other CO received the Medal of Honor. Read Vietnam medic Tom Bennett's story here.
Ken Shultz | March 23, 2006, 10:01pm | #
Nice to see Adventists get some good press. ...I was raised one myself, don't you know, and I can tell you, they usually get the short end of the stick in terms of media coverage.
Other fundamentalists, particularly pro-Lifers, often, don't seem to like them because, among other things, the church won't, or at least for a long time didn't, take a position on the abortion issue. Adventists tend to be super wary of government interference in people's lives. ...I suspect there are as many pro-Choice Adventists as there are pro-Life Adventists for that reason.
...Ultimately,
my libertarianism, I think, springs from my Adventist upbringing.
Non-fundamentalists tend to not like them because they're fundamentalists.
...and my compliments for your phrasing, Mr. Gillespie. The church's position has always been, as I understand, that while noncombatant status is recommended, the decision belongs to the individual. Many have volunteered as noncombatants. I linked
this article the other day from a magazine that's heavily dominated by Adventist thinking, it's about an Adventist Marine who, I believe, is in hot water right now over his decision to not carry a gun.
Bubba | March 24, 2006, 7:23am | #
Dhex quotes me:
"What do you think will become of your liberty should the jihadists succeed in their ultimate goal of worldwide Islamic dominance?"
And then writes:
let us jump up and down! you will posit; i shall disagree!
I'm not jumping up and down. I am saying that, at some point, one must ask: Do we take the jihadists at their word? This was the thing with Hitler: Even after "Mein Kampf," there were people who insisted, "No, Hitler is a reasonable man. We can deal with him." WRONG!
The jihadists say, "The streets will flow with the blood of the unbeliever!" And though they have shown in the most dramatic possible way that they actually mean it, there are still people that say, "Oh, they're reasonable men. We can deal with them."
This point is not, of course, to endorse any particular means of response to the jihadist threat. But the threat must be faced, and defeated, in some way or else the streets WILL flow with the blood of the unbelievers.
And contrary to Number 6's claim, I was not engaged in fallacious argument. I was simply pointing out the falsehood of the Left's claim that all soldiers (or, as they might say, all wise and patriotic soldiers) are anti-war vis a vis Iraq. I have military acquaintances and relatives who are, at best, skeptical toward the administrations aims and methods -- as who wouldn't be? What reasonably well-informed person could go the full route of Wilsonian nation-building, etc., etc., that the administration at least rhetorically advocates? If democracy in Baghdad resembles democracy in Palestine ....?
The problem with the neocons is their love of Plato's "noble lie": They love to dress their arguments up in idealistic rhetoric that draws deeply on American mythos. They love to draw on analogies that amount to saying, e.g., Bush is Churchill. Or JFK. Or ... whatever popular historical figure suits their purpose.
A good argument could have been made for kicking Saddam's ass. But instead of that argument -- some realpolitik talk about the strategic value of kicking Saddam's ass -- what we got was WMDs! Evil dictator! Liberation!
But we still come down to the Mogadishu question, and the matter of Osama's "strong horse" argument. Even if it's a bad war for nebulous ends, we can't just scamper out of there and think that retreat will have no consequence.