America and ISIS: Guns Blazing or Sergeant Alvin York

 Alvin York was an east Tennessee hillbilly who received the Congressional Medal of Honor in World War I. He led nine American soldiers in capturing 132 German combatants after half his original group of Americans had been killed.

York was an uneducated religious man who hated war and fought in World War I only because his request for conscientious objector status was denied. He reluctantly came to believe that the war to defeat Germany was justified. He followed a similar path before World War II, convinced by the actions of Hitler’s Nazis that his country should enter battle to defeat them.

York, however, spent most of his adult life working to bring education to the disadvantaged poor of Tennessee. The fact that he is remembered mostly as a war hero and not for his other pursuits indicates our tendency toward misplaced values.

The U.S. savors the myth of the individual: the war hero who blasts his way to victory. York is sometimes pictured through that myth—the lone hero. York, however, had the help of the others in his unit. And he fought reluctantly. York’s other activities remind us of ideals that shape a country worth defending.

The confrontation with ISIS must be taken with the understanding that military involvement should be reluctant and in consultation with allies. We should acknowledge that other values, like inclusive government, are of more consequence.

 

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