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profile.jpg Mike Dunford was a graduate student in the Department of Zoology at the University of Hawaii, Manoa, where he studied evolution. Life as an army spouse has since moved him on to Pensacola, where he's currently trying to figure out what to do next. While he's doing that, he writes stuff here, although not usually in the third person. He's also a contributer to The Pandas Thumb. As is the case with everyone else here, his opinions are his own, and do not necessarily represent those of any organization he is affiliated with.


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« Dr. Tiller's murder, terrorism, and Christianists: a few (more) thoughts. | Main | Packing Up Again »

The Day I Learned What Courage Was

Category: Do Something
Posted on: June 4, 2009 1:55 PM, by Mike Dunford

On June 5th, 1989, the world got to see exactly what courage is. One man, in a white shirt and dark pants, carrying shopping bags, faced down a company of tanks. The whole world saw the images of his simple courage. His name and his fate remain a mystery - all that is known about his entire life is what he did for a few brief minutes on one terrible day.

A Facebook page has been created to celebrate the legacy of the Tank Man. Please take a few minutes to help demonstrate how important those moments were by becoming a fan.

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Comments

1

Tank Man lives. Updates of this iconic image are all over the Web today. Here, for example:

http://notionscapital.wordpress.com/2009/06/03/20th-anniversary-of-tiananmen-square/

Posted by: Mike Licht | June 4, 2009 3:00 PM

2

I wonder how many other individuals have gotten mowed down throughout history, though, doing this sort of thing. Because they all matter too.

The memory of them may have been what helped this event go as (relatively) well as it did for this guy.

You haven't seen them before because giants were standing on their shoulders.

Posted by: Grouken | June 4, 2009 6:39 PM

3

There is a stunning newly-published picture of Tank Man at the NY Times "Lens Blog".

http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/04/behind-the-scenes-a-new-angle-on-history/?partner=rss&emc=rss

From street level, before the more iconic shots (all from hotel balconies, iirc). Makes me shiver to look at it.

Posted by: Anon | June 4, 2009 10:16 PM

4

At this very moment I am watching the 2006 Frontline episode titled "The Tankman" http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tankman/

It goes beyond the Tankman incident to the whole Tiananmen Square revolt and to the results of the economic trade off that the Chinese government made with the populace.

Posted by: Gerry L | June 5, 2009 12:30 AM

5

I remember the day before the Tiananmen Square massacre. A couple of the women at work were talking about how wonderful it was that the demonstrators had defied an ultimatum from the government and weren't going to back down. And I thought, "They've signed their own death warrants." A government of a billion people would not dare to let one group defy them for fear of losing control. So the next day I was appalled but not surprised.

Posted by: Monado | June 5, 2009 1:55 AM

6

If he was really brave, wouldn't he have stayed in front of the tank instead of letting himself get herded away?

Posted by: dissentingopinion | June 5, 2009 11:41 AM

7

I always felt this guy epitomized the fight for liberty and human rights. As they were predominantly college students intellectual rights and abilities rising above the oppressive faceless mass of communism also came to mind. I have to admit I was ultimately disappointed. They lost their fight largely. I was serving as a Navy corpsman at the time. We certainly don't/didn't need a war with China but I was amazed we'd get involved in a convoluted middle eastern fracas fighting for unbelievably wealthy families while leaving these students and Iraqi Kurds to hang. Clearly, in international relations finance trumps basic human rights and intellectual idealism.

Posted by: Mike Olson | June 7, 2009 10:37 PM

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