Heroic acts in the world thread

Teelie

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We already have a Good Things in the World thread and ones for Weird News, Stupid People and Abuse of Power but there isn't one for people who put their lives in danger to save others lives.

Today, being the 70th Anniversary of D-Day seems like an appropriate time to have one for those people.

Starting it off is the inspiration for a seperate thread:

Jon Meis took a Seattle shooter down did without using a gun. Only a can of pepper spray and a choke hold.

He stopped the guy without requiring deadly force and prevented more people from being shot by Ybarra.

The suspect, Aaron Ybarra, was not a student at Seattle Pacific University, police told reporters Thursday night — but the man who stopped him was.

Local media have identified Jon Meis, a 22-year-old engineering student, as the hero. He is known to be quiet, gentle and outdoorsy.

Seattle Police Assistant Chief Paul McDonagh said the suspect was armed with a shotgun, knife and rounds of ammunition when he opened fire at the university’s Otto Miller Hall.

Meis was armed, too, with a can of pepper spray, which he used to subdue the suspect as he was trying to reload the shotgun. He then put him in a choke hold and took him to the ground, the Seattle Times reported.
Washington Post

Next up is a deputy who also saved lives by shooting and killing an attempted takeover of a Georgia courthouse despite being shot in the leg himself.

A man armed with explosives and an assault rifle might have entered a north Georgia courthouse Friday if not for a deputy who was wounded in the shootout with the gunman, Forsyth County Sheriff Duane Piper said.

Authorities killed Dennis Marx outside the courthouse, Piper said during a news conference, adding that the gunman planned to wreak more havoc once inside the building.

"Mr. Marx's intention was to get in that front door and take hostages," he said.

The suspect began a "frontal assault" on the building by driving up, throwing out "homemade spike strips" to delay any police response, and trying to run over a deputy, Piper said.

Marx then began firing through his windshield, hitting the deputy in the leg, the sheriff said. He also threw gas grenades -- perhaps pepper grenades -- during the attack and had flex ties and water in his possession, according to the sheriff.

Deputies, some from inside the courthouse, engaged in a roughly 90-second shootout with Marx, killing him, Piper said.

The wounded deputy, who has not been identified, was shot while stopping Marx before he could get inside. The deputy is fine, the sheriff said.

The situation "was solved (with) that deputy's actions," Piper said.

Marx was scheduled to attend a hearing at the Forsyth County Courthouse on Friday, but the motive for the attack is still unclear, Piper said, declining to divulge what the hearing concerned.

"He came prepared to stay a while," the sheriff said. "(Marx) came here for the purpose of occupying the courthouse, it appears."

Forsyth County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Robin Regan told CNN earlier that the office responded to a "shots fired" call Friday morning and said the scene "is now secure."

A witness, Alan Neal, said he was at an intersection in front of the courthouse in Cumming when he heard gunfire.

After he heard "two or three pops," he saw deputies fire on someone in front of the courthouse, Neal said.

Neal said he saw people tending to someone who appeared to be injured and police dragging someone else on the side of the courthouse.

Cumming is about 35 miles northeast of downtown Atlanta.
CNN
 
I hope you accept stories of animals as heroes! :woot:: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...wimmer-guiding-boat-aid-claims-scientist.html

Did dolphins save a girl from SUICIDE? Mammals formed a ring around drowning swimmer after guiding boat to her aid, claims scientist

Tales of dolphins rescuing stricken humans from death at sea have been documented as long ago as ancient Greece.

But as yet there is no scientific evidence to prove that the marine mammals empathise with another species’ dire situations.

While it is not known if dolphins are merely curious or go out of their way to rescue people, one ecologist has shared a story of how the marine mammals came to the aid of a suicidal girl off the waters of Los Angeles, California.

article-2648352-1E7587D800000578-52_634x419.jpg


Maddalena Bearzi, president and co-founder of the Ocean Conservation Society, shared the account in her latest book, 'Dolphin Confidential: Confessions of a Field Biologist', an extract of which was published by National Geographic.

She said that her team was following a school of bottlenose dolphins near the shore to study their behaviour, when one individual suddenly broke away from a feeding circle and set off into deeper waters.

The rest of the group set off in pursuit, much to the researchers' surprise who were used to tracking the animals back and forth within a few hundred metres of the beach.

They followed the speeding dolphins to around three miles (5km) off the coast.

‘The dolphin group stopped, forming a sort of ring around a dark object in the water,’ she wrote.

Dr Bearzi’s assistant saw the a lifeless girl, who she described as pallid and fully clothed.

‘As the boat neared, she feebly turned her head toward us, half-raising her hand as a weak sign for help.’

The researchers radioed the lifeguards and lifted the girl out of the water before racing back to the closest harbour, Marina del Rey.

Upon examination, one of the team said that the girl had severe hypothermia and they wrapped her in a blanket and hugged her to keep her warm.

They discovered that the girl, thought to be around 18, could speak little English and was on holiday.

Emergency doctors later told the scientists that the girl would make a full recovery but had been found with a suicide note.

‘If we hadn’t found her, if the dolphins hadn’t led us offshore when they did, to that specific place, she would have died,’ Dr Bearzi wrote.

As the scientists were busy trying to save the girl, they had not continued to track the dolphins’ behaviour.

‘What might they have done with her if we hadn’t been there? Might they have tried to save her?’ she asked.

There are many accounts of dolphins scaring off sharks or guiding humans lost at sea to shore. Some scientists think that intelligent dolphins are merely curious when coming to a human's aid.

article-2648352-1E764D0800000578-628_634x469.jpg


They also swim under struggling members of their own species to push them to the surface, so may be doing the same with humans in the water.

Dolphins have been observed coming to the rescue of a stranded pod of whales as well as rescuing a human that was bitten by a shark, in recent years. They seemingly drove the predators away so the man could be rescued.

In the Red Sea, a group of dolphins reportedly surrounded 12 divers who were lost for over 13 hours, repelling sharks living in the area. People aboard a rescue boat also reported that the animals seemed to be trying to show them where the stranded divers were.

However, many scientists do not think that the animals deliberately save humans and no evidence exists to prove otherwise.

‘That day I witnessed coastal bottlenose dolphins suddenly leave their feeding activities and head offshore. And in doing so, they led us to save a dying girl, some three miles offshore. Coincidence?’ Dr Bearzi wrote.

-------------------------------------------------------

CASE STUDY: DOLPHINS 'PROTECT' A SWIMMER FROM A SHARK

In April, British swimmer Adam Walker was joined by dolphins, seemingly to protect him from sharks on a gruelling eight hour swim across the Cook Strait near New Zealand.

He noticed a two metre shark-shaped figure swimming beneath him in the waters.

The shark never attempted an attack, as a pod of dolphins soon came to his side, swimming alongside Mr Walker for an hour while he crossed the strait.
Whether they simply wanted to join in the fun or were actually actively participating in protecting Mr Walker from a possible shark attack is unclear, but the swimmer is grateful non-the-less.

'It would be a nice thought they were thinking, we will just help our pal get through,' Mr Walker said.

He was partaking in his sixth swim as part of the Ocean's Seven challenge in which participants attempt to swim what are considered the seven hardest long-oceans around the world, while raising money for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.

The athlete later added the following comment to his Facebook page after completing the swim: 'Yesterday I swam the 6th of the 'oceans seven' swims 'Cook Strait' in 8 hours 36 mins. But that doesn't tell the whole story rolling waves, big currents but more important than that a dream come true swimming with dolphins over an hour!!

'I'd like to think they were protecting me and guiding me home!!! This swim will stay with me forever,' he wrote.

I love dolphins, so i'm inclined to believe they are smart and special :yay:
 
It is for heroic acts, nothing says animals can't be heroic too. Dolphins are quite intelligent and though some are known to be cruel they also can show acts of kindness and help like in this case.
 
Afghan Veteran Who Absorbed Blast Gets Medal of Honor
A former U.S. Marine Corps corporal who was severely wounded when he risked his life to shield a squad mate from a grenade blast in Afghanistan was awarded the nation’s highest military decoration today.

William “Kyle” Carpenter, 24, is the eighth living recipient of the Medal of Honor who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan. He received the award from President Barack Obama in a ceremony at the White House.

“Kyle is a shining example of what our country needs to encourage,” Obama said.

Carpenter, now a student at the University of South Carolina, was medically retired from the service in July due to his injuries. He was at a rooftop observation post for a patrol base in Afghanistan’s Helmand Province in November 2010 when it was attacked by Taliban fighters.

During the attack, a grenade landed where he and another lance corporal were in position, according to a Marine Corps account. Carpenter ran toward it, trying to shield the other Marine from the blast. When it detonated, Carpenter’s body absorbed most of the explosion, shattering his jaw and other bones, taking his right eye and collapsing a lung.
40 Surgeries

“They found Kyle lying face down. His helmet was riddled with holes. His gear was melted,” Obama said. “He sensed the end was coming.”

Carpenter spent five weeks in a coma and endured almost 40 surgeries.

“His total disregard for his own personal safety distinguishes his conduct above and beyond the call of duty in the face of certain death,” the Marine Corps’ citation says.

“I will wear this medal for the incredible medical staff that helped keep me alive and put me back together,” Carpenter told reporters after the ceremony. “I am proud to be a Marine. I am proud of those who have raised their right hand.”

He spoke inside the White House briefing room, typically reserved for administration officials, because his eye damage prevents him from tolerating bright sunlight outdoors.

The fellow Marine who Carpenter saved was also grievously injured and couldn’t speak for a year. He is recovering at home in Plymouth, Massachusetts, after treatment at the military medical center in Bethesda, Maryland, where he met Obama.
Previous Recipients

In May, Obama gave the Medal of Honor to Kyle J. White, a former Army sergeant turned investment analyst who fought off attackers when his unit was ambushed in Afghanistan’s Nuristan Province on Nov. 9, 2007.

In March, Obama awarded the Medal of Honor to 24 U.S. Army veterans for their valor in World War II, Korea or Vietnam. The recipients -- only three of whom were still living -- had been passed over for the honor because of their race, ethnicity or religion. They were the single largest group of service members to receive the Medal of Honor since World War II.

Obama presented the medal as he grapples with how the U.S. should respond to extremists seizing territory from the central government in Iraq. Today he said he’s sending as many as 300 U.S. military advisers to help the Iraqi army. The president has said the only option he isn’t considering is sending ground combat troops.
Business Week
 

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