

Hit4Average
6.5K posts

@hit4average
Retired. Carried a gun and a badge for a lot of years. Military Family. God bless our troops and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. #MAGA #MAHA
































🙏🇺🇸🙏 On May 6, 1942, on Corregidor Island in the Philippines, General Jonathan Wainwright faced one of the most brutal decisions a commander can make. Surrounded by overwhelming Japanese forces, with no reinforcements, no supplies, and thousands of exhausted American and Filipino soldiers under his command, he was given a choice that wasn't really a choice at all. Continue fighting and watch his remaining men be annihilated, or surrender and save their lives. It meant ordering the largest surrender in American military history, over 80,000 troops, and risking being remembered as the general who gave up. He chose their lives. In that moment, he believed he had destroyed his own legacy. What followed was three years of captivity in brutal prisoner-of-war camps, where he endured starvation, isolation, and constant psychological torment. But the hardest part wasn't the physical suffering, it was the belief that he had failed his country. With no news from home, he lived with the weight of that decision, replaying it again and again, convinced he would never be forgiven. What he didn't know was that back in the United States, leaders and citizens saw something completely different. They saw a man who made an impossible decision to save tens of thousands of lives. When he was finally liberated in 1945 and asked how America viewed him, the answer shocked him: he was a hero. He was awarded the Medal of Honor, promoted, and welcomed home with national recognition. The man who thought he had disgraced himself had actually done something far rarer. He chose responsibility over pride, lives over legacy, and humanity over symbolism. His story is a reminder that courage is not always found in fighting to the end, but sometimes in knowing when to stop, even if the world might misunderstand you 🙏🇺🇸🙏












