Advertisement
Featured
The Real Occupation: Occupy Has Always Hated the Jews
by Charles C. JohnsonJoel Pollak has already written on the divestment campaign going on at Occupy Oakland, but it is worth remembering that Kalle Lasn and Micah White, the two founders of the Occupy movement, have always hated the Jews and their state. As I explain in the forthcoming issue of The American...
Advertisement
Categories
- Afghanistan
- Africa
- arms control/disarmament
- Asia
- Border Security
- Burma
- chemical/biological weapons
- China
- Communism
- Congress
- Cuba
- Culture/Art
- cyber threats
- diplomacy
- Economy
- education
- Egypt
- Energy
- Espionage
- Europe
- Exclusives
- Featured Story
- Foreign Policy
- Greece
- ground zero mosque
- History
- Homeland Security
- human rights
- Humanitarian
- Intelligence
- Iran
- Iraq
- Islam
- Islamic extremism
- Israel
- Justice/Legal
- Latin America
- Media Criticism
- Michael Yon Dispatches
- Middle East
- Military Funding
- Military Technology
- News
- North Korea
- Nuclear Proliferation
- Obama
- Open Thread
- Other
- Politics
- Russia
- saudi arabia
- sharia
- Soldiers
- Strategy
- Syria
- Terrorism
- Uncategorized
- United Nations
- united states
- veterans
- Weapons
Blogroll
- 9/11 Families for a Safe & Strong America
- ABCNews
- Ace of Spades HQ
- Agence France Press
- American Foreign Policy Council
- American Legion
- American Spectator
- Ann Coulter
- Army Times
- Associated Press
- Atlas Shrugs
- Ben Shapiro
- Big Hollywood
- BLACKFIVE
- BlogsLucianneLoves.com
- Bloomberg
- Bob McCarty
- Boston Globe
- Breitbart.com
- Breitbart.tv
- C-SPAN
- Canada Free Press
- Castle Argghhh!
- CDR Salamander
- Center for Security Policy
- Center for Strategic and International Studies
- Center for Vision & Values
- Charles Krauthammer
- Chicago Tribune
- China Post
- Christopher Hitchens
- Claremont Institute
- Commentary
- Daily Gut
- Defense News
- Dennis Miller Radio
- Dennis Prager
- Der Spiegel
- Diana West
- Drudge Report
- Economist
- Financial Times
- Foreign Affairs
- Foreign Policy Research Institute
- Founding Bloggers
- Fox Nation
- Fox News
- Free Republic
- Freedom House
- Gates of Vienna
- Gateway Pundit
- GayPatriot
- Generational Dynamics
- George Marshall Institute
- George Will
- Glenn Beck
- Heritage Foundation
- Hot Air
- Huffington Post
- Hugh Hewitt
- Human Events
- Instapundit
- Institute of World Politics
- Investors Business Daily
- James Hudnall
- James Madison Institute
- Jawa Report
- Jerusalem Post
- John Gibson
- John Nolte
- Khaleej Times
- Lars Larson
- Laura Ingraham
- LibertarianRepublican.net
- Long War Journal
- Los Angeles Times
- Lucianne.com
- Mark Levin
- Mark Steyn
- Media Research Center
- Melanie Morgan
- Michael Savage
- Michael Walsh
- Michael Yon
- Mickey Kaus
- Mike Flynn
- Military Officers Association of America
- Move America Forward
- MSNBC
- National Center for Public Policy Research
- National Review
- National Review’s The Corner
- Nationalsecurity.org
- Navy Times
- Neal Boortz
- New Republic
- New York Magazine
- New York Post
- New York Times
- Newport Beach Now
- NewsBusters
- Newsweek
- Pajamas Media
- Pat Dollard
- Patterico’s Pontifications
- Politico
- Power Line
- PR Newswire
- Pravda
- Protein Wisdom
- Real Clear Politics
- Reason
- RedState
- Rep. McCotter YouTube Channel
- Reuters
- Ricochet
- RobertRinger.com
- Roger L. Simon
- Roll Call
- Rolling Stone
- Rush Limbaugh
- Rusty Humphries
- Salon
- Sean Hannity
- SecureAmericaNow.org
- Slate
- Smoking Gun
- South Park Episodes
- Tammy Bruce
- The Brody File
- The Daily Beast
- The Daily Caller
- The Enterprise Report
- The Hill
- The National Interest
- The Spectator U.K.
- Thomas Sowell
- Time
- Times U.K.
- Townhall.com
- U.K. Daily Mail
- U.K. Guardian
- U.K. Telegraph
- U.S. News
- USA Today
- Vanity Fair
- Volokh Conspiracy
- Wall Street Journal
- Washington Examiner
- Washington Post
- Washington Times
- Weekly Standard
- WorldThreats.com






Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
This Week’s Medal of Honor Moment
This week, I chose 30 July as the day to represent the Medal, as it has an interesting concatenation of awards. We start, as most days do for the Medal, with the Civil War, and 23 Medals, 21 of them for the Battle of the Crater (warning – turn your sound down, annoying music), plus three other Medals for fights in other wars. There are two more Medals for actions at The Crater, which were awarded to individuals for multiple actions on different days. I chose to not list those for clarity’s sake and consistency in how I present this series, where when a Medal covers a period of time or multiple separate dates I will list those on the day of the last action the Medal was issued for. An example of that type of Medal is Sergeant Major Cohn, who’s Medal of Honor covered both the fights at The Wilderness and the Crater. Another reason I chose this day of this week is to point you to the immigrant nature of the armies of the era. Just as in the Armed Forces today, many earned their citizenship the hard way. There are African-American soldiers in this list today as well.
The Civil War has several battles where a large number of Medals are awarded – because not only was the Medal new (it was established in 1863) it was also the *only* award of its type. So today many of these Medals would be covered by the Bronze Star with V, Silver Star and Distinguished Service Cross. There is another thing to consider, especially when comparing to the current environment of the Global War On Terror/Contingency Operations – in the Civil War, the big fights had tens of thousands of people closing, or attempting to close, to hand-to-hand combat. In the post-invasion-of-Iraq and in Afghanistan combat rarely do you have a thousand combatants in a fight (2nd Fallujah is a good example of that) the fights are usually small unit actions, involving fewer than 100 troops combined. There are both fewer people engaged and fewer people observing the engagements. There are simply many Medal moments in the current round of battle that no one noticed, leave aside what I believe to be an excessively cautious award process in place today.
The signature action for the Medal of Honor during the Civil War was the flag capture or re-capture. The unit colors were important to command and control as the soldiers kept an eye on them in the din and smoke of battle – and judged by the behavior of the colors how the battle was going. Aside from the very Victorian elements of unit pride, an enemy soldier carrying your colors was not a sign that the battle was going well – just as seeing the enemy colors in the hands of one of your compatriots gave a significant uplift to morale.
The next Medal is from the period of the Interim Awards, 1871-1898 This one is cryptic. One assumes it was a drowning rescue, as the history of Pensacola has nothing in it of special note for that time period. Today, this action would merit a Navy and Marine Corps Medal, the sea services highest award for peacetime valor not involving combat.
We then move to WWI and a rather tough and determined Sergeant of Infantry.
And finally, this days roll ends with WWII. If the flag capture was the iconic award for the Civil War, falling on a grenade is the iconic Medal for the modern era.
*Asterisk indicates a posthumous award. If you would like to read more about the Medals of Honor awarded during this week in history, visit my blog at Castle Argghhh!