ChatGPT You said: Design me a tattoo based on this text The Berserker Army Medic who crushed the enemy skulls to save his team and was awarded the Medal of Honor: On June 14, 1952, in the mountains of Korea, a six-foot-five, 250-pound Army medic named David Bruce Bleak showed the world what brute strength looks like in war. His recon team was ambushed by Chinese forces on Hill 499. Bleak charged into a trench with nothing but a trench knife and his hands. He snapped one enemy’s neck. Crushed another’s throat. Stabbed a third through the chest. Shielded a wounded comrade from a grenade with his own body and kept moving. But this is the part no one forgets. While dragging a badly wounded soldier down the hill, two enemy troops charged with rifles and bayonets. Bleak dropped the man he was carrying, grabbed both enemies by the head, and slammed their skulls together with so much force it likely fractured both. No one else on that ridge had the size, strength, or mindset to do that. He did it without hesitation. Then he picked up the wounded man again and carried him the rest of the way. All twenty members of the patrol survived. Five enemies were dead. Four at his hands. No rifle. No backup. Just raw strength and sheer will. For that, Bleak was awarded the Medal of Honor. He was a medic. But when the moment came, he became a hammer. Sometimes leadership means carrying people. Sometimes it means crushing skulls to keep them alive. Strength matters. Physical dominance matters. See more