Friday, November 19, 2010

"...soldiers who kill people and break things..."

It seems there is a man working with the American Family Association (they're just all over the place these days) called Bryan Fischer.


Mr. Fischer recently denounced the award of the Congressional Medal of Honor to a soldier in Afghanistan who rescued several of his team members from a Taleban ambush.


Mr. Fischer says America has "feminized" the award:
When we think of heroism in battle, we used the think of our boys storming the beaches of Normandy under withering fire, climbing the cliffs of Pointe do Hoc while enemy soldiers fired straight down on them, and tossing grenades into pill boxes to take out gun emplacements. 
That kind of heroism has apparently become passe when it comes to awarding the Medal of Honor. We now award it only for preventing casualties, not for inflicting them. 
So the question is this: when are we going to start awarding the Medal of Honor once again for soldiers who kill people and break things so our families can sleep safely at night?
I would suggest our culture has become so feminized that we have become squeamish at the thought of the valor that is expressed in killing enemy soldiers through acts of bravery. We know instinctively that we should honor courage, but shy away from honoring courage if it results in the taking of life rather than in just the saving of life. So we find it safe to honor those who throw themselves on a grenade to save their buddies.
According to his biography, Mr. Fischer has never served in the military, much less in a war.
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