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Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Heroes, Anyone?
by Rebecca Hagelin
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Everybody loves a hero. But pop culture spends so much time worshipping Hollywood stars and super athletes that many of our children don't know a true hero from an imposter.

Add that to fact that the news media constantly criticize our Armed Services, that our schools often teach revisionist history, and that many leaders "blame America first," and it's no wonder that our children seem more prone to want to grow up to become a pop icon than anything akin to a "superhero" of old. Nearly gone are the stories of mighty men rescuing damsels in distress or of those courageously leading brave soldiers into battle to free the oppressed.

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A fourth-grade teacher recently learned just how low the hero-bar has fallen when she assigned an exercise on heroes and role models. She asked her students to draw a picture of someone they aspired to be like and explain why. The children chose "heroes" like Madonna and 50 Cent; more than half the boys' glorified criminal characters with one stating he wanted to be a "hit man."

The majority of girls drew women who were in some way pop icons, mostly dressed in something skimpy. There were no soldiers, no rescue workers, no stories of our Founding Fathers, great explorers or "ordinary Americans doing extraordinary things." The children listed only thugs, rappers and pop stars.

We do our children a great injustice when we rob them of knowing about people who exhibit courage and self-sacrifice. The result just might be a generation with nothing truly great to aspire to.

We benefit both our children and our country when we teach that real heroes are people willing to make great sacrifices on behalf of others. A primo athlete might have our well-deserved awe and wonder, but that does not make him a hero. An actress might merit our admiration, but that doesn't make her a heroine. Only those who selflessly risk their safety, their fortunes, their own dreams or their very lives for others are worthy of being called heroes.

Why is it so important to make the distinction? For one, "to give honor to whom honor is due." And so our children will understand the importance of being willing to put everything on the line to preserve freedom or the well-being of others. America simply cannot continue to be the "land of the free and the home of the brave" without a renewed understanding and the continued practice of heroism in its truest sense.

It's easy to find real-life heroes and introduce our children to them. Why not start with our own Armed Services? Men and women in uniform don't often make the cover of magazines, but they are in every town across America and probably in your neighborhood, or even in your own family.

It's not enough to celebrate them once or twice a year from afar. Seek them out; incorporate accounts of their service into ongoing conversations with your sons and daughters. We need to pull out the old history books and classic stories as well as recent accounts by America's warriors. Two great resources are the documentary and book, Warriors...in Their Own Words which describe heroics in Iraq and feature interviews with those who are gladly sacrificing right now for our families. (You can order the DVD and book at www.WarriorstheFilm.com).

There's something very powerful and inspiring when a child meets a flesh-and-blood hero fighting on their behalf or reads personal accounts of what motivates them to serve so selflessly. It can be visionary and life-changing. If you take the time to teach your child about real heroes, you might just end up creating one.

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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Heroes and a Villain
I have two examples of modern day heroes:

John McCain, who endured more than four years of capture and imprisonment by the North Vietnamese and

George W. Bush, one of the most vilified presidents in modern times but who kept us safe after 9/11.

An example of a villain: John Kerry, who fought with the Navy and returned from Vietnam, thanks to suspicious "wounds" and turned against the USN and his country while still a commissioned officer.

The REAL Heroes
John McCain is getting old, in more ways than one. Read here about a true hero http://theblacksphere.blogspot.com/2009/05/cheney-takes-on -man.html and from a guy who has a way of making his point in a humorous way.

Enjoy!

Dinner table conversations?
I wonder if some family time that includes talk of "heroes" would help.

Heroes that have been mentioned only in passing rather than in headlines could be cited for the unfair treatment.

How about families helping in soup kitchens or conservation efforts, and noticing how much work and intestinal fortitude it took for somebody to initiate the effort? A community hero that the kids could meet!

Horrifying that if the parents now don't do it, the kids may never know what a real hero is, nor how many of them there are and how they contributed to what we are blessed with today.

Thugs and the Self-Absorbed!
The media is responsible for this mind-set. How is a guy who throws a basketball through a hoop a "hero" Better yet "madonna"? she is sleazy, self-centered and runs with abandon, when it comes to conventional wisdom. This has been going on for a decade, at least. The mind-set in this country is all about status and money. These are not our heros, folks. Where are the parents? Personally, I have a 35 y/o son and he doesn't even know the history of his own country, as the liberals in the USA want none of this stuff taught. There are people in this country who don't even know how many states are in it, DAH? Hero's....our firemen, military, nurses, rescue workers, etc...they get paid little and provide a needed service to others'; get focused people and appreciate how good others' sacrifices and integrity make your life better. Athletes and Bollywood only entertain, they "do not" make a meaningful impact on our lives!

Perfect example.
"How about families helping in soup kitchens or conservation efforts......"

A perfect example of how the word "hero", when misused by someone without personal accomplishment, comes to mean almost nothing.

Altruism is for Collectivists
Your repeated portrayal of a “hero” as someone who sacrifices himself or herself for others reflects what is fundamentally wrong with BOTH conservatism and progressivism and what is taking us inexorably down the path to collectivism and statism. Brainwashing kids to believe that their worth is measured by how much they selflessly sacrifice themselves for others only serves to “softens them up” to become adults who uncritically accept calls from statists like Obama, McCain, Powell, and others to “serve something greater than self.”

This road to serfdom is being paved by all three branches of the federal government. Obama, our Collectivist-in-Chief, calls on us to “spread the wealth around” leading to higher income taxes and the death tax. The Supreme Court reinterprets eminent domain to allow expropriate of private property for “public benefit.” Our parasitic generation is running out of sacrificial animals to feed on, so Congress decides to saddle future generations with trillions of dollars of debt, effectively enslaving them as selfless serfs to help the present generation in need. The government will soon be in the business of rationing health services on the premise that we need to respect and serve the universal “human right” to health care.

We need a different kind of moral ideal embodied in a different kind of hero: We need to reject altruism and collectivism and adopt the moral ideal of rational self-interest and individualism. We need heroes who exemplify this ideal--people we can admire and respect because they inspire us to live our wholes lives well and flourish without sacrificing ourselves to some “higher good.” If we look around, we can find people from all walks of life who make principled choices and decisions with the goal of living happy lives. They excel at living live well and are the real heroes for our children.

What America really needs..
... is a national holiday for our business heros. I've always found it odd that we have two holidays for our military (Veteran's day for the living ones, Memorial day for those who died), but nothing for our entrepreneurs.

What Town Hall needs is a bigger photo of Rebecca Hagelin (sigh). Oh, and also a bozo block for loonies like Joel the Oppressor.


Wrong Hero Worship
Part of the problem here is that society has allowed, even aided and abetted the perversion of the true hero figure. Money is the new god (a perversion); an actor or athlete is paid obscene amounts of money to “act” a hero's part or “play” a pseudo heroic game but the real hero who puts his/her life on the line gets paid dismally low wages in comparison. Meanwhile the masses prostrate themselves to their gods.

Heroes
I can't recall having a hero when I was young.Of course I rarely went to movies and there was no tv.around 70 years ago.Today my heroes are all our sevice men and women,Also folks like Rush.Glenn,and Ann Coulter.Those that speak out against the wrongs of our times today

Heroes?
Jax33 can't remember men like Sgt York, Tom Mix, The Lone Ranger, etc?? They were heroes in that they portrayed heroes, except Sgt York, he was real. Every lad wanted to be like the heroes of the west. Short memory?? WE all realized the actors weren't the heroes but the characters they played in movie after movie WERE heroes. The westerns gave you the good, the bad and the heroes. Bruce Willis' lawman character is about the only one I can think of in the present. James Bond just doesn't make it. Too much like fantasy!

Heroes--Band of Brothers.
John Stuart Mill penned his thoughts with prophetic brilliance: ‘War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things; the decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks nothing worth a war, is worse. A man who has nothing which he cares more about than he does about his personal safety is a miserable creature who has no chance at being free, unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.’

The men of the 101st Airborne, which the movie was about, were all heroes, the better men. The one man, don't remember his name was telling that his grandson asked if he were in the war and then, was he a hero? He replied, "No, but I served in a company of heroes".

I bet I know one that nobody thought of
It was during the Revolutionary War and the Union Army was in deep do-do. It appears that the scrip that was offered to the men and suppliers was worthless. The only money that the colonists had to deal with was the British Pound, and of that the colonists had a very limited supply. After all, how can you wage a battle against the enemy when it was the enemy that had given you the money in the first place?

Along came a man by the Haim Salomon. He singlehandedly funded the army and the war with money from his own coffers.The young nation racked up such a debt to the man that it could be not be repaid. Just the interest from all the funds would be more than the 2009-2010 budget (as difficult as that seems!). He died at the age of 43. He died PENNILESS!

He was, by the way, Jewish.

He was just one of America's Revolutionary Was heroes!

Nightowl 872
The man your quoting is named Major Dick Winters.

Schools are part of the problem too
In CA, text books say nothing about American heroism of our firefighters and police on 9/11/01. The books say NOTHING about the brave military men and women who rescued 1,000s from Katrina in New Orleans. The books say NOTHING about the many Medal of Honor Recipients of the Iraq/Afghanistan conflicts, much less anything about the everyday heroism of a soldier or sailor's family that carries on without him for months at a time, while he/she risks their lives for our liberty.
We had foster children 3 years ago, and in the 7th grade they came home from school and told me all excitedly that the US had started WWII...

Schools aren't "part of the problem too"
SCHOOLS ARE THE PROBLEM! I know this for certain as I foolishly allowed my two sons to go to public school after excellent starts in Montessori Schools. (the REAL thing, not the pablum of today)

Although one child excelled in spite of gubmint schools, the other was lost in them. Nothing taught but a bunch of horse puckey crud in later elementary years and all throughout high school. I should have taken them back to private schools after the sixth grade.

Donald in OH
Have you ever read what happened to the signers, all, of the Declaration of Independence??
They gave their all!!! Almost all died penniless and alone.
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