It seems to me if they would look a notch further back in our 20th century history ... look back to World War II and about two decades further back to World War I, they could find a point at which we had protestors who were very well-respected in our society. They were called "Conscientious Objectors" and they either did not believe in war, or they felt they could not kill another human being and thus could not go into combat.
But though many conscientious objectors did not want to serve in the military, neither did they want to turn the world over to evil men like Hitler or Mussolini or Tojo. They knew that was wrong, and that if we didn't do something, a lot of innocent people would die. So they volunteered to be combat corpsmen ... the people who would go into the fiercest fighting to save our wounded servicemen, right out there on the battlefield. Look at the record of the Navy Corpsmen assigned to the Marines on Iwo Jima in World War 11 ... at the number of conscientious objectors who died, and the number who were decorated for valor and bravery. They won respect from all of us, not on the streets of America, but on the battlefields where other brave men died for our freedom.
This is Gordon Sawyer, from a window on historic Green Street.
http://accesswdun.com/article/2003/3/181343