- February 20th, 2021, 2:33 am
#378477
I nominate Frederick Douglass. As Trump says, "he's done an amazing job."
I hope he's not disqualified on the technicality that he wasn't a criminal. I assume that in the South his running away made him one, and just not a piece of stray property.
But although he was heroic, I wouldn't say he was the most heroic. To the extent that comparisons can be make, I'd reserve that label for any of a number of people who willingly walked into the flames, as it were.
I also find it impossible to pick a most heroic for reasons that someone else has already expressed. Once you get to a certain level of horror, the heroism required to encounter it is all pretty much the same. But if I had to choose, just because I recently came across her I'd go with Marguerite Porete, who refused to recant and was burned at the stake for writing about her love of God in a frowned upon manner. The fact that I consider her cause a silly one doesn't detract from her heroism.
And no way would I have made the same choice as any of those heroes who decided that being burned alive, or whatever, was the thing for him or her. Bravery aside, I'm not a fan of spitting into the wind. Plus, I am a coward.