ANSWERS: 21
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • John Cage and Hulk Hogan.
  • Susan B. Anthony
  • John Wayne
  • Margaret Sanger, Eleanor Roosevelt, Victoria Woodhull and Harriet Tubman (to mention a few heroines.)
  • Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Harriet Tubman, George Washington, Frederick Douglas, Teddy Roosevelt ... too many to remember in one posting.
  • There can only be one answer to this question: Richard Simmons.
  • Michael Landon , from the littel house, every one loved him and wanted him to be their dad .
  • All of the thousands and thousands of Americans that send help and support to the people who have been victims of disasters. You cannot imagine the relief when you see truck loads of food, water, clothing, and what-not being delivered just when you think all hope is lost. Thousands of people left their own homes and came down here at their own expense to help us when there was no other help to be had. It was amazing and inspiring. I think that volunteer help did more for our recovery than anything else. We knew that people cared and that gave us the strength to keep going.
  • Geronimo
  • Pat Tillman.
  • Oprah Winfrey. She helped thousand of people get new home after katrina.
  • George Dubya Bush... hey, wait a minute, what the Hell?!
  • William Blum
  • Michael Moore.
  • Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain. Professor of Rhetoric at a college in Maine, left his comfortable job to enlist in his state's militia, the 20th Maine. Sought no position as an officer, he only wanted to serve his state and his country, to attempt to eliminate slavery in the South. When his Colonel was wounded in action, he bravely took over his regiment in the midst of battle. He was officially given the position later as commander of the 20th Maine. On June 30, 1863, his unit began marching toward Gettysburg, PA. On July 2, his regiment was placed on a hill called Little Round Top at the flank (end) of the Union Army's position that wound its way through the high ground of Gettysburg. His unit was given strict orders - prevent the Confederate Army from compromising the Union line ... at all costs. What followed would be the stuff of legend. Col. Chamberlain and the 20th Maine bravely withstood attack after harrowing attack as the Confederate Army attempted to round the Union line and attack the Union from behind. But there was a problem - his men were running out of bullets. What would happen when they were defenseless? Col. Chamberlain, knowing that it would mean the lives of not only his men, but those of the entire Union line, if the Confederacy broke through, gave an order that is widely considered to be not only the turning point of the Battle of Gettysburg, but of the war itself. Col. Chamberlain ordered his men to fix bayonets. They would fight hand-to-hand if they had to, to prevent the Confederacy from flanking the Union Army. When the Confederacy's inevitable attack came, he led his men in a charge down Little Round Top, causing the exhausted and started Confederate attackers to quickly retreat from their position. The Union Army would go on to victory the following day at Gettysburg and in 1865 for the war itself. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain served for the remainder of the war. Before it ended, he would be wounded in both legs and would be promoted to Brigadier General. He returned to a hero's welcome in Maine and would eventually become president of the very same college he left to serve his country. He would later be elected as one of the most popular governors in Maine history. His life and story is that of a true American hero.
  • People that would never accept that they were, thousands that died unsung for us, unknown. Only in the history of our fathers. Just one of them that did survive for awhile was Ira Hayes, died in a cold ditch one night. He never could accept the status they offered him.
  • irra hayze
  • My dad.
  • Audie Murphy. You look him up and find out why.
  • GI joe of course, no seriously members of the military and anyone has made a change for the better in the world

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