Posted on May 12, 2015
SFC Joseph James
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American hero1
I know some of us has been called a "Hero" from time to time, either from civilians or other military veterans. But what makes a person a "Hero"? Does just serving make you one, a type of medal or citation, dying even? I personally hate being called one because I served by choice and even though i was injured in combat, i volunteered for it! Plain and simple. I really don't have an opinion about others, only myself. So what do you think? What makes a "Zero" become a "Hero"?
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Responses: 74
SPC Generator Mechanic
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I think a hero can come in many shapes or forms. Sometimes, you know them when you see them and sometimes you are clueless to the efforts and sacrifice that were made. But the hero knows. My husband is my hero. Him and his group of Marines that cleared the way for all of us that came following and lived in the areas they secured. He was my angel without me knowing.
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CW2 Counterintelligence Technician
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SFC Joseph James, I think a hero is in the eye of the beholder. My brother, five years my senior, is fighting lung cancer. He is staying positive and keeping his head up, even though he is very sick. To me, that's heroic. On the other side of that coin, I was visiting him in the hospital and, to everyone that walked in, he introduced me as "Active Duty SSG Kevin J Parker, United States Army." I was a little embarrassed, but he refused to stop. His nurses walked in and, after his introduction, he said, "That's a man sitting there. Anyone who will get blown up by an IED and shot at by an RPG and not be scared is a MAN." Now, in my head I'm thinking how I'm one of hundreds who fit that criteria, but, to my big brother, I'm his hero. He also becomes emotional when he meets other servicemen and - women. We are all his heroes.
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SSG (ret) William Martin
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A hero laughs at death in the face and never looks back.
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LTC Mo Vanderslice
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Doing your job in the military and do it well and without supervision, being ready to give it your all when the situation calls for it, and giving your troops and junior leaders all of the credit when the mission goes well...most military personnel are heroes in one degree or another, but thankfully only a few of us at a time have to face the situations that require us to be the kind of Soldier, Sailor, Marine, or Airman that makes our forefathers proud of our generation - my thanks to SPC Skarlatos and Airman Stone for carrying on the traditions of our service!
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SGT Scott Bell
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someone who put his or her life on the line for someone you do not know.
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SSG Motor Sergeant
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My view of a hero. A person with morals. A Person who put his or herself life before others without equivocal hesitation.
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Sgt Joshua Ray
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Simply a title given to you by people that appreciate you beyond anything they can show.
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LTC Damon LaCour
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I believe all that served are heroes, volunteer or "voluntold".
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MAJ Keira Brennan
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Tibor
Is a type of sandwich that consists of a long roll of Italian or French bread, split widthwise either into two pieces or opened in a "V" on one side, and filled with a variety of meats, cheeses, vegetables, seasonings, and sauces. OR it is CPL Tibor Rubin, a Hungarian Jew who survived Mauthenhausen Concentration Camp in Austria, came to America as a refugee (spoke no English), was captured by the Chinese in Korea and is credited in saving 40 American POWS. http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/koreanwar.html#RUBIN

NAZI Concentration Camp to Commie POW Camp after coming to America -- and saving 40 American men.
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SFC Armor Crew Member
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That is actually a great question. I have deployed three times. Got a TBI, did my thing in Iraq, however I am NOT a hero. I lost friends there, and honestly they simply died doing the same thing that we did everyday and I am not sure that I would call them hero's. They simply were STOLEN from us.
Hero's would be someone that did something that was above and beyond, i.e. someone that actually "took that bullet for someone else", someone that jumped on that grenade for someone else. Let me get less graphic, someone that was simply there for you in your time of need. A hero is someone that kept your head above water when you didn't think you had it in you.
My TRUE Hero's...my PERSONAL HERO's those who did something that they really did not want to do (for the most part) and never got thanks for it. Vietnam Vets. Those are MY hero's.
So, hero's are something that come in different shapes and sizes. Different reasons, different needs for them. Not all of them are those ones that we hear about, some just got us through a rough deployment. Some just get us through everyday life and some actually did something that the majority of us either never did and paid the ultimate price or pay an ongoing ultimate price (severe injury from protecting those they were with for example)
That would be my definition from the hip.
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MSG Greg Kelly
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I have read many of the posts here about this subject. I agree with many shake my head at some and raise an eye brow at a few. But none are wrong I suppose because how can someone be wrong for what they feel or believe. It just shows there are many ideas of a Hero. My hero and Idol never served but his beliefs and moralities motivated me. One of my best friends is in my mind a Hero he saved four lives while taking fire from insurgents when he pulled them from a burning vehicle. And was then repaid by being shorted the award he was due. Or is the Hero the person that is stoic their whole lives. Or the person who has lost it all and lives on the street. Or is it the person that dies alone doing a job or of old age and no one seems to care. Is it the MH winner or the ARCOM earner? Is it all of them or none of them. The choice is ours alone I see all who have served as Vets not all are Hero's I am no Hero and I have been told I was the person who said it meant it. But they did not live the terror I and many others have but I thank them for it anyway.
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