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Medal of Honor Ceremony Reminds America What Real Courage Looks Like – RedState

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Medal of Honor Ceremony Reminds America What Real Courage Looks Like – RedState

When a president places the Medal of Honor around a soldier’s neck — or into the hands of a grieving family — the country should stop and pay attention. That is exactly what happened when President Donald Trump honored three United States Army heroes on Monday after already recognizing Navy Capt. E. Royce Williams and Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover during the State of the Union on February 24.





As America leads the fight against Iran, it is of the utmost importance that we celebrate the men and women willing to risk everything to defend this country. This is more than a White House ritual. It is a rare moment of moral clarity in a political culture that too often celebrates the trivial and ignores the essential.


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That’s why there was a Medal of Honor ceremony on March 2. President Trump honored Master Sgt. Roddie Edmonds, Command Sgt. Maj. Terry Richardson, and Staff Sgt. Michael Ollis — men who never asked to become symbols. They were simply doing their jobs in war, and they did them with a level of courage that defies easy description.

Edmonds faced down a Nazi officer in a prisoner-of-war camp and refused to separate his Jewish soldiers, declaring, “We are all Jews here,” knowing he could be shot on the spot. Richardson charged through a storm of enemy fire in Vietnam, repeatedly exposing himself to rescue wounded men before climbing a hill alone to call in air support for hours under direct attack. Ollis, in Afghanistan, stepped between a wounded Polish ally and a suicide bomber, using his own body as a shield and giving his life just weeks before his twenty-fifth birthday.





These are not movie plots. They are documented acts of valor that meet the Medal of Honor’s strict standard: gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life, above and beyond the call of duty, with incontestable proof. In each case, the soldier had every excuse to step back. No one would have blamed them. They moved forward anyway.

Trump’s role in these ceremonies matters — especially at a time when the presidency is too often reduced to partisan scorekeeping. Trump told Richardson he had entered “the ranks of the bravest warriors ever to walk the face of the earth” and called Ollis’s sacrifice “the ultimate test.” That is not exaggeration — it is the plain truth.





It is also a quiet rebuke to a culture that tosses around words like “brave” and “heroic” for social-media gestures and celebrity activism. Real bravery is Edmonds standing with 1,200 prisoners and telling a Nazi officer that if he wants to kill the Jews, he will have to kill them all. Real heroism is a young American in Afghanistan who sees a suicide vest and runs toward it, not away.

A healthy country lifts up these examples and teaches them to the next generation. A serious media and political class would cover these ceremonies with the same intensity we give to scandal and gossip. If we want to repair the civic fabric, we could do worse than start here: Tell these stories in schools. Expect our leaders — regardless of party — to show up for the men and women who meet this standard.





America still produces people like Edmonds, Richardson, and Ollis. The least we can do is honor them, learn from them, and refuse to cheapen the word “hero” by pretending it applies to anything less.


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