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Name: The Chopping Block
Location: Piscataway, NJ
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John Wayne Is Not A Hero

Ok, so out of nowhere and from no particular current event, I do have to put down for the record how much I disdain I have for the fact that congress gave John Wayne a Congressional Gold Medal for his patriotism in 1979, exactly 37 years after John decided to put his film career before military service in WWII. 
 
Although he did not actually dodge the draft, he did not take any steps to join the service, as many celluloid stars did during the war.  For anyone to use the word "hero" and John Wayne in the same sentence is ludicrous.  He was no hero.  He played the part of a hero in films, but never ever performed any act remotely considered heroic.
 
Is this a petty hair across my you know what.  You bet, but I have been passionate about reserving the word "hero" for those that actually put their lives on the line to save someone else, and John Wayne hardly fits the bill.
 
 
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Your Local Postman Is Not A Hero (at least not because he delivered your mail for 30 years)

"Hero" should be reserved for people that put their own lives in danger to save another human being from death.  Without these two elements present--knowing full well that you are putting your health and safety in danger, and saving another person from death or injury--then it is not a heroic action.

For example, it has become fashionable to call someone who has been on the job a long time and has had a positive impact on people's lives a hero, but in fact, they are not heroes.  They may be "role models", but they are not heroes.

We need to reserve "hero" for the real heroes--firemen that rush into buildings to save others, policemen that put their lives on the line to save people, corpsmen and medics that rush into the line of fire to save wounded marines and soldiers, etc.  you get the picture.  If we continue to water down (I call it "hero inflation", like "grade inflation") the word hero, eventually we will have no word for the real heroes.  Well, I guess that is what it will come to, they will be called "real" heroes.  Point made...
 
And by the way, it turns out that my local postman is a hero.  He is a Vietnam veteran who was awarded the Bronze Star for heroism under fire.
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