Your ship is taking on
water. You are sinking.
You send up a signal
flare asking any vessels nearby to come to rescue your men. All the vessels are
WAY TOO FAR away, and no one can reach your carrier in time. What do you do?
WHAT DO YOU DO? Do you wait for those too-far-away rescue
boats ?
OR,
do you take any necessary action in
order to save those sailors’ lives?
Coronavirus is very much like any other lethal thing
that would creep onto the carrier; seep into every crevice and KILL
EVERYONE ON BOARD. Tell me, is there ANY action
that is improper if taken in order to save the lives of 4800 American fathers,
sons and husbands who have put their lives on the line every day to serve their
country, their fellow citizens, you --and your family?
As a family member of those sailors, would you
want the captain to hesitate? Would you want him to wait
while his letters and mayday calls to the Navy Secretary make their way up the
chain of command?
There are times to wait, and times to act. When even one sailor’s life in in danger—and
that life can be saved by your action or lost by your hesitation—a moral
person, a responsible person, a compassionate brave leader will ACT.
There are times when you cannot wait. When lives are at stake, you cannot wait!
Captain Brett Crozier wrote an impassioned plea to leadership
to get his men off that ship! One hundred sailors were infected. The other
4,700 would surely have become infected;
and, the longer it took to get them off the ship, the more lives would be lost.
That is not a theoretical: that is
a medical scientific FACT.
Think of it as a fire. Or carbon monoxide. A lethal thing
that will spread, like a fire ,and KILL.
Would you really wait longer than necessary? When you ask for
help for your crew and it when it doesn’t come IMMEDIATELY, what would you do?
When my daughter was two years old, she began to choke on a
prune. Would you call 911 and wait for them to come? Or would you do as I did :
snatch her up immediately and do the Heimlich maneuver?
When my other daughter became limp and her eyes slowly closed
as dehydration strained her body, would you call 911 and wait for them to
arrive—or would you do as I did—stimulate her briskly prepared to do CPR and
then when she revived call for medical help, take her to the ER, to her doctor
for further treatment?
Don’t misunderstand me: calling 911 is an important thing to
do. But if you called 911 and they put you on hold, would you just STAY
on hold? Or would you take whatever action you believed would save a life?
Captain Crozier dialed 911, so to speak. The Navy Secretary
put him on hold while the Secretary tried to figure out what to do.
Can you think how Captain Crozier would have been treated if
he had waited on hold and allowed 4,800 young men to die? How was he treated, by the way? He was fired
and relieved of his command.
The sailors on the aircraft carrier know their captain acted to
save their lives. How do they feel?
Watch the video of Captain Crozier marching off his ship after
he had been fired. They cheered!
They clapped. They chanted his name. They were showing their thanks.
Those sailors’ families thank Captain Crozier as well.
Saving a single life is heroic. Saving 4,800 lives? Isn’t that
even more heroic?
I have no doubt that under a future presidential
administration Captain Crozier will be awarded the medal
he justly deserves for having saved nearly 5000 American sailors’ lives. As they ask on the TV show of the same name, what
would you do?
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