Bryan Fischer here with today’s Life and Liberty Minute. Desmond Doss entered the army in 1942 as a conscientious objector and served as a medic, just like my father. Because of his religious convictions, Doss refused to carry a weapon, which earned him abuse from the men in his unit, who tried to get him to transfer out. They only grudgingly accepted him. He was with them in Okinawa in 1945 when they got cut to ribbons attacking a Japanese stronghold. Everyone but Doss retreated from the plateau where dozens lay wounded. Under fire, he began to treat them and move them one at a time to a place where he could rope them down to safety. Every time he prayed, “Dear God, please let me get just one more man.” By the end of that day, he had single-handedly saved 75 GIs and earned the Congressional Medal of Honor. Sometimes you can help win a war without firing a shot.